| Literature DB >> 30940153 |
Gwendolyn L Gilbert1,2, Ian Kerridge3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospital infection prevention and control (IPC) programs are designed to minimise rates of preventable healthcare-associated infection (HAI) and acquisition of multidrug resistant organisms, which are among the commonest adverse effects of hospitalisation. Failures of hospital IPC in recent years have led to nosocomial and community outbreaks of emerging infections, causing preventable deaths and social disruption. Therefore, effective IPC programs are essential, but can be difficult to sustain in busy clinical environments. Healthcare workers' adherence to routine IPC practices is often suboptimal, but there is evidence that doctors, as a group, are consistently less compliant than nurses. This is significant because doctors' behaviours disproportionately influence those of other staff and their peripatetic practice provides more opportunities for pathogen transmission. A better understanding of what drives doctors' IPC practices will contribute to development of new strategies to improve IPC, overall.Entities:
Keywords: Accountability; Infection prevention, Healthcare-associated infections, Clinical autonomy; Leadership; Unprofessional behaviour
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30940153 PMCID: PMC6444390 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4044-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Characteristics of participants
| Doctors [ | Nurses [ | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender M: F | 10: | 3:7 | ||
| Seniority | Divisional director | 6 | Hospital/divisional director or deputy; facility manager | 6 |
| Departmental/unit director | 4 | Nursing unit manager | 2 | |
| Other senior medical consultant | 6 | Clinical nurse consultant | 2 | |
| Specialty | Medical 6; surgical 4; other 6a | 16 | Medical 5; surgical 3; other 2b | 10 |
aOther doctors’ specialties: intensive care [2]; emergency medicine [2]; anaesthetics [1]; obstetrics/gynaecology [1]
bOther nurses’ specialties: intensive care, infection prevention and control
Interview topics/questions used to prompt discussion with participants
| 1. In your view, to what extent do doctors generally regard healthcare associated infections or colonisation with multidrug resistant pathogens as significant problems in this hospital? | |
| a. Do they/you believe that some/most could be prevented? | |
| 2. There is evidence from audits and published research that doctors often comply less consistently than nurses with infection prevention and control measures. | |
| a. Is this consistent with your experience and, if so, why do you think it is so? | |
| 3. What changes, if any, would you make in hospital infection prevention and control policies or their implementation to: | |
| a. make them more acceptable to doctors, |
Major themes identified by analysis of interview transcripts – factor affecting doctors’ attitudes to and practice of IPC
| 1. Characteristics of doctors, medical culture and medical professionalism | |
| i. Clinical independence/autonomy | |
| 2. Interprofessional factors | |
| 3. Organisational factors | |
| 4. Factors relating to IPC policies and/or their implementation |