Comparing human to electronic observers to monitor hand hygiene compliance in an intensive care unit

Author:

Casaroto Eduardo,Generoso Jose R.ORCID,Serpa Neto AryORCID,Prado MarceloORCID,Gagliardi Guilherme M.,de Menezes Fernando Gatti,Gonçalves Priscila,Hohmann Fábio BarlemORCID,Olivato Guilherme Benfatti,Gonçalves Gustavo Potratz,Xavier Nathalia,Fernandes Miguel Marcelo,Edmond Michael B.,Marra Alexandre R.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Objective: We sought to determine whether an electronic hand hygiene (HH) system could monitor HH compliance at similar rates to direct human observation. Methods: This 4-year proof-of-concept study was conducted in an intensive care unit (ICU) of a private tertiary-care hospital in São Paulo, Brazil, where electronic HH systems were installed in 2 rooms. HH compliance was reported respectively using direct observation and electronic counter devices with an infrared system for detecting HH opportunities. Results: In phase 1, HH compliance by human observers was 56.3% (564 of 1,001 opportunities), while HH compliance detected by the electronic observer was 51.0% (515 of 1,010 opportunities). In phase 2, human observers registered 484 HH opportunities with a HH compliance rate of 64.7% (313 of 484) versus 70.6% (346 of 490) simultaneously detected by the electronic system. In addition, an enhanced HH electronic system monitored activity 24 hours per day and HH compliance without the presence of a human observer was 40.3% (10,642 of 26,421 opportunities), providing evidence for the Hawthorne effect. Conclusions: The electronic HH monitoring system had good correlation with human HH observation, but compliance was remarkably lower when human observers were not present due to the Hawthorne effect (25%–30% absolute difference). Electronic monitoring systems can replace direct observation and can markedly reduce the Hawthorne effect.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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