Patients’ Hand Washing and Reducing Hospital-Acquired Infection

Author:

Haverstick Stacy1,Goodrich Cara2,Freeman Regi3,James Shandra4,Kullar Rajkiran5,Ahrens Melissa6

Affiliation:

1. Stacy Haverstick is a staff nurse on a cardiothoracic step-down unit at University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

2. Cara Goodrich is a staff nurse on a cardiothoracic step-down unit at University of Michigan Health System.

3. Regi Freeman is a clinical nurse specialist in the cardiovascular intensive care unit University of Michigan Health System.

4. Shandra James is a clinical assistant professor at University of Michigan, School of Nursing, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

5. Rajkiran Kullar is an infection preventionist at University of Michigan Health System.

6. Melissa Ahrens is an infection preventionist at University of Toledo Medical Center, Toledo, Ohio.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Hand hygiene is important to prevent hospital-acquired infections. Patients’ hand hygiene is just as important as hospital workers’ hand hygiene. Hospital-acquired infection rates remain a concern across health centers. OBJECTIVES To improve patients’ hand hygiene through the promotion and use of hand washing with soap and water, hand sanitizer, or both and improve patients’ education to reduce hospital-acquired infections. METHODS In August 2013, patients in a cardiothoracic postsurgical step-down unit were provided with individual bottles of hand sanitizer. Nurses and nursing technicians provided hand hygiene education to each patient. Patients completed a 6-question survey before the intervention, at hospital discharge and 1, 2, and 3 months after the intervention. Hospital-acquired infection data were tracked monthly by infection prevention staff. RESULTS Significant correlations were found between hand hygiene and rates of infection with vancomycin-resistant enterococci (P = .003) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (P = .01) after the intervention. After the implementation of hand hygiene interventions, rates of both infections declined significantly and patients reported more staff offering opportunities for and encouraging hand hygiene. CONCLUSION This quality improvement project demonstrates that increased hand hygiene compliance by patients can influence infection rates in an adult cardiothoracic step-down unit. The decreased infection rates and increased compliance with hand hygiene among the patients may be attributed to the implementation of patient education and the increased accessibility and use of hand sanitizer.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care,General Medicine

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