Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development (Jun 2023)

Feasibility and acceptability of a novel intervention to improve hand hygiene behavior in rural Liberian health facilities

  • Lucy K. Tantum,
  • John R. Gilstad,
  • Lily M. Horng,
  • Amos F. Tandanpolie,
  • Ashley R. Styczynski,
  • Andrew G. Letizia,
  • Stephen P. Luby,
  • Ronan F. Arthur

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/washdev.2023.190
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
pp. 403 – 414

Abstract

Read online

Hand hygiene is central to the prevention of healthcare-associated infection. In low-income settings, barriers to health worker hand hygiene may include inconsistent availability of hand hygiene supplies at the point of care. However, there is a lack of knowledge of interventions to improve and sustain health worker hand hygiene in these settings. This pilot study evaluates acceptability and feasibility of a personally-worn hand hygiene holster device for improving point-of-care access to alcohol-based handrub (ABHR). Holsters were distributed to clinical staff at a hospital in Liberia in July–September 2021. Data collection included 2,066 structured observations of hand hygiene behavior, six spot checks of supply availability, and focus group discussions with 13 clinical staff. The Integrated Behavioral Model for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (IBM-WASH) provided a framework for study design and qualitative analysis. Acceptability of the intervention was high, with users reporting that holsters were comfortable, easy to use, and aligned with their professional identities. Feasibility depended on consistent ABHR availability, which may diminish sustainability of this intervention. The hand hygiene holster is a promising tool for improving health worker hand hygiene behavior, but solutions to ABHR supply chain and distribution constraints are necessary to support sustainability of this intervention. HIGHLIGHTS This pilot study evaluated the feasibility and acceptability of a hand hygiene holster device to improve access to point-of-care hand hygiene in Liberian health facilities.; Users reported satisfaction with holsters and many felt that this intervention made hand hygiene more accessible during patient care.; Further research should explore the impact of the holster intervention on health worker hand hygiene behavior.;

Keywords