| Literature DB >> 26271619 |
John Adam Reich1, Monica E Goodstein2, Susan E Callahan3, Kathleen M Callahan4, Lindsay W Crossley5, Shira I Doron6, David R Snydman7, Stanley A Nasraway8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Hand hygiene is an effective, low-cost intervention that prevents the spread of multidrug-resistant bacteria. Despite mandatory education and reminders, compliance by physicians in our hospital remained stubbornly low. Our objective was to study whether surveillance by our unit coordinator (secretary) paired with regular feedback to chiefs of service would increase physician hand hygiene compliance in the ICU.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26271619 PMCID: PMC4536705 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-015-1008-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Hand hygiene compliance trend in intervention group and post intervention group. Physicians’ rate of change (slope) was 3.1 % per month (p <0.001 95 % confidence interval (CI) 1.65–4.60) during the time when feedback was provided with report cards. Sustained compliance rate greater than 90 % is shown in the 24-month post study period
Fig. 2Panel A is hand hygiene compliance at beginning of study by specialty. Panel B is hand hygiene compliance at end of the study by specialty. Specialties are ranked from highest to lowest compliance. These graphs were emailed monthly to chiefs of service and demonstrate their ranking in relation to other services
De-identified compliance of different members of sample specialty. These were available upon request to chiefs of service
| Team member | Compliant encounters | Noncompliant encounters | Percent compliance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Attending physician | 3 | 4 | 43 % |
| House officer | 51 | 37 | 58 % |
| Physician assistant | 59 | 26 | 69 % |
| Medical student | 19 | 10 | 66 % |
| Totals | 132 | 77 | 63 % |