| Literature DB >> 25937922 |
Kalisvar Marimuthu1, Didier Pittet2, Stephan Harbarth3.
Abstract
The purpose of this review is to examine studies that have assessed the association between hand hygiene enhancement and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) rates and to explore controversies surrounding this association. Many studies have been published confirming the link between improved hand hygiene compliance and reduction in MRSA acquisition and infections, including bacteremia. These studies have also shown the cost-beneficial nature of these programmes. Despite considerable research some issues remain unanswered still, including the temporal relationship between hand hygiene enhancement strategies and decrease in MRSA rates, association between hand hygiene enhancement and MRSA-related surgical site infections, diminishing effect of hand hygiene compliance on MRSA rates after reaching a threshold and the role of instituting contact precautions in the setting of low MRSA rates and sufficient hand hygiene compliance. In conclusion, enhancement of hand hygiene compliance has been shown to reduce MRSA rates; however, some open issues warrant further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol-based handrubs; Hand hygiene; Hand washing; MRSA bacteremia; MRSA control; Multimodal strategy; Nosocomial MRSA
Year: 2014 PMID: 25937922 PMCID: PMC4417535 DOI: 10.1186/2047-2994-3-34
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Selected studies that specifically assessed the role of hand hygiene enhancement on methicillin-resistant rates
| First author and year | Trial design | Setting | Hand hygiene enhancement strategy | Other interventions to reduce MRSA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pittet et al. [ | Quasi-experimental | Hospital-wide | ABHR, staff education, reminders, performance feedback and administrative involvement | On-site surveillance, implementation of prevention guidelines, outbreak investigations, and environmental sanitization |
| Johnson et al. [ | Quasi-experimental | Hospital-wide | ABHR, staff education, reminders, performance and feedback and culture change program | Enhanced cleaning of healthcare equipment, and decolonization of MRSA patients |
| Grayson et al. [ | Quasi-experimental | Multiple hospitals | ABHR, education, performance feedback and recommendations for culture change | Individual hospitals observed various MRSA control measures |
| Stone et al. [ | Prospective ecological | Acute NHS hospital trusts, United Kingdom | ABHR, reminders, audit and performance feedback and patient empowerment | Saving lives campaign, Health Act 2006, and visit to trusts by Department of Health improvement team |
| Kirkland et al. [ | Before and after study | Hospital-wide | Leadership accountability, measurement/performance feedback, ABHR, education/training and marketing/communication | None reported |
| Lee et al. [ | Prospective interventional cohort study | Surgical wards | Hand hygiene improvement program as per WHO guideline | Screening and contact isolation and targeted decolonization |
| Derde et al. [ | Hybrid prospective interventional cohort study and RCT | Intensive care units | Hand hygiene improvement program as per WHO guideline | Universal decolonization in phase 2 and screening and isolation in phase 3 |
Abbreviations: MRSA methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, ABHR alcohol-based handrubs, NHS National Health Service, RCT randomized controlled trial.
Figure 1Strategies to control nosocomial methicillin-resistant Adapted with permission from Harbarth [1].