Author:
Aboumatar Hanan,Ristaino Polly,Davis Richard O.,Thompson Carol B.,Maragakis Lisa,Cosgrove Sara,Rosenstein Beryl,Perl Trish M.
Abstract
Background.Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) result in significant morbidity and mortality. Hand hygiene remains a cornerstone intervention for preventing HAIs. Unfortunately, adherence to hand hygiene guidelines among healthcare personnel is poor.Objective.To assess short- and long-term effects of an infection prevention promotion program on healthcare personnel hand hygiene behaviors.Design.Time series design.SettingOur study was conducted at a tertiary care academic center.Participants.Hospital healthcare personnel.Methods.We developed a multimodal program that included a multimedia communications campaign, education, leadership engagement, environment modification, team performance measurement, and feedback. Healthcare personnel hand hygiene practices were measured via direct observations over a 3-year period by “undercover” observers.Results.Overall hand hygiene compliance increased by 2-fold after full program implementation (P<.001), and this increase was sustained over a 20-month follow-up period (P< .001). The odds for compliance with hand hygiene increased by 3.8-fold in the 6 months after full program implementation (95% confidence interval, 3.53–4.23; P< .001), and this increase was sustained. There was even a modest increase at 20 months of follow up. Hand hygiene compliance increased among all disciplines and hospital units. Hand hygiene compliance increased from 35% in the first 6 months after program initiation to 77% in the last 6 months of the study period among nursing providers (P<.001), from 38% to 62% among medical providers (P<.001), and from 27% to 75% among environmental services staff (P<.001).Conclusions.Implementation of the infection prevention promotion program was associated with a significant and sustained increase in hand hygiene practices among healthcare personnel of various disciplines.Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2012;33(2):144-151
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Epidemiology
Cited by
49 articles.
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