Public Health Department, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Wijaya Kusuma Surabaya, Surabaya, Indonesia.
J Hosp Infect. 2010 Nov;76(3):256-60. doi: 10.1016/j.jhin.2010.06.021. Epub 2010 Sep 17.
Few attempts to increase healthcare workers' hand hygiene compliance have included an in-depth analysis of the social and behavioural context in which hand hygiene is not undertaken. We used a mixed method approach to explore hand hygiene barriers in rural Indonesian healthcare facilities to develop a resource-appropriate adoption of international guidelines. Two hospitals and eight clinics (private and public) in a rural Indonesian district were studied for three months each. Hand hygiene compliance was covertly observed for two shifts each in three adult wards at two hospitals. Qualitative data were collected from direct observation, focus group discussions and semistructured in-depth and informal interviews within healthcare facilities and the community. Major barriers to compliance included longstanding water scarcity, tolerance of dirtiness by the community and the healthcare organisational culture. Hand hygiene compliance was poor (20%; 57/281; 95% CI: 16-25%) and was more likely to be undertaken after patient contact (34% after-patient contact vs 5% before-patient contact, P<0.001) and 'inherent' opportunities associated with contacts perceived to be dirty (49% 'inherent' vs 11% 'elective' opportunities associated with clean contacts, P<0.001). Clinicians frequently touched patients without hand hygiene, and some clinicians avoided touching patients altogether. The provision of clean soap and water and in-service training will not overcome strong social and behavioural barriers unless interventions focus on long term community education and managerial commitment to the provision of supportive working conditions.
很少有尝试深入分析医护人员未进行手部卫生的社会和行为背景,以提高他们的手部卫生依从性。我们采用混合方法,探讨印度尼西亚农村医疗机构中的手部卫生障碍,以制定适合资源的国际准则采用方案。对印度尼西亚农村地区的两家医院和八家诊所(私立和公立)进行了为期三个月的研究。在两家医院的三个成人病房,每个病房各观察两个班次的两次轮班,进行隐蔽性的手部卫生依从性观察。在医疗机构和社区内,通过直接观察、焦点小组讨论以及半结构化深入和非正式访谈收集定性数据。主要的合规障碍包括长期缺水、社区对污垢的容忍度以及医疗组织文化。手部卫生合规性很差(20%;281 次接触中 57 次,95%CI:16-25%),且更可能在接触患者后进行(接触后 34%,接触前 5%,P<0.001),且与被认为脏的接触相关的“固有”机会(固有接触 49%,与干净接触相关的“选择性”机会 11%,P<0.001)。临床医生经常在未进行手部卫生的情况下接触患者,有些临床医生则完全避免接触患者。除非干预措施侧重于长期社区教育和管理层对提供支持性工作条件的承诺,否则提供清洁肥皂和水以及在职培训不会克服强大的社会和行为障碍。