Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases (Sep 2016)

Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, China

  • Xia Mu,
  • Yan Xu,
  • Tingxiu Yang,
  • Ji Zhang,
  • Chong Wang,
  • Wei Liu,
  • Jing Chen,
  • Luyu Tang,
  • Huai Yang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 5
pp. 413 – 418

Abstract

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Objective: Hand hygiene (HH) is a critical component for controlling hospital-acquired infection (HAI). The present study was designed to develop an intervention approach to improve compliance with HH among healthcare workers in a hospital setting. Methods: The HH intervention study was conducted in Guizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Guiyang, China and organized by its Department of HAI Management. It was an observational, prospective, quasiexperimental (before-after intervention) study. The study was divided into two phases: the baseline phase and the intervention phase. The investigative team included clinical monitoring staff and infection control practitioners who received a series of instructions on HH compliance, monitoring skills, and measurement of the use of HH products. Results: Based on 27,852 observations in a 17-month period, the rate of compliance with HH improved from 37.78% at baseline to 75.90% after intervention. Significant improvement in compliance and an increase in consumption of HH products was observed after intervention. The per patient-day consumption of alcohol-based hand rub products and handwash agents increased by 4.75 mL and 4.55 mL, respectively. The consumption of paper towels increased 3.41 sheets per patient-day. During the same period, the prevalence rate of HAI decreased 0.83%. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that a significant improvement in compliance with HH can be achieved through a systemic, multidimensional intervention approach involving all categories of healthcare workers in a hospital setting, which may result in a decrease of the HAI rate. Keywords: Hand hygiene, Compliance, Hospital-acquired infection