| Literature DB >> 31443355 |
María B Martos-Cabrera1, Emilio Mota-Romero1, Raúl Martos-García1,2, José L Gómez-Urquiza3, Nora Suleiman-Martos4, Luis Albendín-García1,3, Guillermo A Cañadas-De la Fuente3.
Abstract
Background: Patient safety is a priority of any healthcare system, and one of the most effective measures is hand hygiene. For this, it is important that health staff have correct adherence and perform the technique properly. Otherwise, the incidence of nosocomial infections can increase, with consequent complications. The aim here was to analyze hand hygiene training and the effectiveness of different methods and educational strategies among nurses and whether they maintained correct adherence over time.Entities:
Keywords: hand hygiene; handwashing; infection control; nurses; nursing education
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31443355 PMCID: PMC6747325 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16173039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart of included studies.
Characteristics of included studies (n = 17).
| Author, Country, (Year) | Design | Interventions | Sample | Hand Hygiene Compliance | Main Results | LE/GR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Educational strategies | ||||||
| Fisher et al., Singapore, (2013) [ | Randomized controlled trial | HH compliance using ultrasound + audio reminders | - | Higher HH compliance after intervention of 6.8% (95% CI, 2.5–9.5) | 1a/A | |
| Ho et al., China, (2012) [ | Randomized controlled trial by groups | CG: reception of intervention package (posters, talks, hydroalcoholic solution)IG 1: same + glove pack slightlypowderedIG 2: same + powderless gloves | CG = 19.5% | Increase in HH compliance | 1a/A | |
| Huis et al., Netherlands, (2013a) [ | Randomized controlled trial | Adherence to two improvement strategies of HH | GLD: 19.1% | Increase of HH adherence through social influence and enhanced leadership in HH improvement strategies | 1a/A | |
| Huis et al., Netherlands, (2013b) [ | Randomized controlled trial by groups | Strategy of HH compliance that was leader-directed | CG: 20% | HH compliance rates improved from 22% (just before implementing strategies) to 47% (after the intervention) and to 48% (six months after). The vanguard group improved from 23% to 42% in the short term and 46% in the long term. Compliance in CG increased from 20% to 53% (short term) and remained at 53% in the long term | 1a/A | |
| Kukanich et al., United States, (2013) [ | Randomized controlled trial | Improved HH in two outpatient healthcare clinics | G1: 11% | The frequency of HH improved significantly after intervention | 1a/A | |
| Martín-Madrazo et al., Spain, (2012) [ | Cluster randomized controlled trial | 5MHH to evaluate HH | Overall baseline compliance level: 8.1% | 1a/A | ||
| Rodríguez et al., Argentina, (2015) [ | Conglomerate randomized controlled trial | Improving HWs compliance with HH | 50% | A multimodal strategy was effective for HH compliance | 1a/A | |
| Rupp et al., United States, (2008) [ | Randomized clinical trial | Adherence in the use of alcohol-based hand gel | Unit A: 47% | Increase in the use of alcohol-based hand gel at 31% in both units | 1a/A | |
| Stewardson et al., Switzerland, (2016) [ | Conglomerate randomized controlled trial | Control group (G1): observation of participants | G1: 66% | HH compliance increase from 65% to 77% | 1a/A | |
| von Lengerke et al., Germany, (2017) [ | Randomized controlled trial | CG: training measures on “clean hands action” (adaptation of World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) “Cleaner Care Is Safer Care” program) | CG: 55% | Increased adherence to HH through behavioral interventions in 2013 vs 2015 | 1a/A | |
| Xiong et al., China, (2017) [ | Randomized controlled trial | CG: self-directed readings | The level of knowledge about HH increased by 15% in the intervention group | 1a/A | ||
|
| ||||||
| Chow et al., Singapore, (2012) [ | Randomized controlled trial | Compared the effectiveness of 3 HH protocols | In terms of daily care, alcohol hand rubbing covering all hand surfaces was the most effective intervention | 1a/A | ||
| Sharma et al., India, (2013) [ | Randomized controlled trial | Comparison of 3 HH methods | Povidone–iodine scrub and alcohol hand rubbing were superior to plain soap hand washing | 1a/A | ||
|
| ||||||
| Dulon et al., Germany, (2009) [ | Randomized controlled trial | Increase protective behavior through a skincare program reducing skin disease | CG: 19% | No differences between groups in work behavior (prevalence post-intervention= 17% in both groups). | 1a/A | |
| Van der Meer et al., Netherlands, (2014) [ | Randomized controlled trial | Effects of a multifaceted implementation strategy on behavior, behavioral determinants, knowledge, and awareness of HWs regarding the use of recommendations to prevent hand eczema | CG: 10.3% | IG group was significantly more likely to report hand eczema | 1a/A | |
|
| ||||||
| Bloomfield et al., UK, (2010) [ | Randomized controlled trial | Effects of a computer-assisted learning module (IG) vs conventional face-to-face classroom teaching (CG) | - | Computer-assisted learning was effective in teaching both the theory and the skill of knowledge of hand washing | 1a/A | |
| Jansson et al., Finland, (2016) [ | Randomized controlled trial follow-up study | Four phases: | IG = 40.8% | HH adherence in IG increased to 59.2% (6 months after the intervention) and decreased to 50.8% (24 months after) | 1a/A |
Note: CG = control group; GR = grade of recommendation; HH = hand hygiene; HWs = health workers; ICU = intensive care unit; IG = intervention group; LE = level of evidence; NICU = neonatal intensive care unit; 5MHH = five moments for hand hygiene.