| Literature DB >> 30692145 |
Heidi Storm Vikke1,2, Svend Vittinghus2, Matthias Giebner3, Hans Jørn Kolmos1,4, Karen Smith5,6,7, Maaret Castrén8, Veronica Lindström9,10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Healthcare-associated infection caused by insufficient hygiene is associated with mortality, economic burden, and suffering for the patient. Emergency medical service (EMS) providers encounter many patients in different surroundings and are thus at risk of posing a source of microbial transmission. Hand hygiene (HH), a proven infection control intervention, has rarely been studied in the EMS.Entities:
Keywords: emergency medical services; hand hygiene; prehospital care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30692145 PMCID: PMC6580871 DOI: 10.1136/emermed-2018-207872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Med J ISSN: 1472-0205 Impact factor: 2.740
Figure 1Five moments for hand hygiene according to WHO recommendations.7 8
General characteristics per observed hand hygiene indication, overall and by country
| N=1344 | Overall | Finland | Sweden | Denmark | Australia | P value |
| n (%) | ||||||
| Provider level | ||||||
| Basic care | 349 (26) | 39 (16) | 174 (42) | 136 (32) | 0 | 0.000 |
| Advanced care | 995 (74) | 198 (84) | 244 (58) | 289 (68) | 264 (100) | |
| Gender | ||||||
| Male | 852 (63) | 149 (63) | 195 (47) | 405 (95) | 103 (39) | 0.000 |
| Female | 492 (37) | 88 (37) | 223 (53) | 20 (5) | 161 (61) | |
| Hand hygiene indications | ||||||
| Before patient | 513 (38) | 77 (32) | 156 (37) | 182 (43) | 98 (37) | 0.002 |
| Before clean/aseptic | 158 (12) | 43 (18) | 53 (13) | 27 (6) | 35 (13) | |
| After body fluids | 119 (9) | 23 (10) | 41 (10) | 31 (7) | 24 (9) | |
| After patient | 482 (36) | 76 (32) | 148 (35) | 165 (39) | 93 (35) | |
| After surroundings | 72 (5) | 18 (8) | 20 (5) | 20 (5) | 14 (6) | |
Hand hygiene compliance in general and per indication, overall and per country
| N | Overall | Finland | Sweden | Denmark | Australia | P value | |
| n (%) | |||||||
| In general | 1344 | 198 (15) | 25 (11) | 54 (13) | 104 (24) | 15 (6) | 0.000 |
| Before patient contact | 513 | 16 (3) | 3 (4) | 3 (2) | 10 (5) | 0 | 0.041 |
| Before clean/aseptic | 158 | 3 (2) | 0 | 0 | 3 (11) | 0 | 0.005 |
| After body fluids | 119 | 10 (8) | 3 (13) | 0 | 6 (19) | 1 (4) | 0.007 |
| After patient contact | 482 | 142 (29) | 16 (21) | 48 (32) | 69 (42) | 9 (10) | 0.000 |
| After surroundings | 72 | 27 (38) | 3 (17) | 3 (15) | 16 (80) | 5 (36) | 0.000 |
Glove behaviour among emergency medical service providers, overall and per country
| N | Overall | Finland | Sweden | Denmark | Australia | P value | |
| n (%) | |||||||
| Before patient contact | 513 | ||||||
| New gloves | 247 (48) | 43 (56) | 49 (32) | 117 (64) | 38 (39) | 0.000 | |
| Continuous | 105 (21) | 19 (25) | 21 (14) | 16 (9) | 49 (50) | ||
| No gloves | 161 (31) | 15 (19) | 86 (55) | 49 (27) | 11 (11) | ||
| Before aseptic/clean | 158 | ||||||
| New gloves | 22 (14) | 5 (12) | 4 (8) | 9 (33) | 4 (11) | 0.000 | |
| Continuous | 101 (64) | 31 (72) | 25 (47) | 14 (52) | 31 (89) | ||
| No gloves | 35 (22) | 7 (16) | 24 (45) | 4 (15) | 0 | ||
Emergency medical service providers’ adherence to hygiene parameters regarding nails, hair and jewellery, overall and per country
| Overall | Finland | Sweden | Denmark | Australia | P value | |
| n (%) | ||||||
| Clean short nails | 64 (83) | 15 (75) | 19 (95) | 18 (90) | 12 (71) | 0.153 |
| Short/up done hair | 76 (99) | 20 (100) | 19 (95) | 20 (100) | 17 (100) | 1.000 |
| No jewellery | 48 (62) | 9 (45) | 14 (70) | 20 (100) | 5 (29) | 0.000 |
Risk factors related to lack of hand hygiene* compliance among emergency medical service providers
| Potential risk factors | Observed number of non-compliances | Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis† | ||||
| OR | 95% CI | P value | OR | 95% CI | P value | ||
| Advanced-care level | 872/1146 | 1.9 | 1.4 to 2.7 | 0.000 | 1.7 | 1.1 to 2.4 | 0.007 |
| Female | 428/1146 | 1.2 | 0.9 to 1.7 | 0.176 | 1.3 | 0.9 to 1.9 | 0.107 |
| Wearing gloves | 708/1146 | 25.0 | 14 to 45 | 0.000 | 45.0 | 10.8 to 187.8 | 0.000 |
*Either hand wash or hand rub.
†Including an interaction term between ‘wearing gloves and educational level’ (interaction non-significant, p=0.309).