School of Computing and Information Systems, The University of Melbourne, 700 Swanston St, Carlton, 3053, VIC, Australia.
J Med Syst. 2022 May 6;46(6):36. doi: 10.1007/s10916-022-01817-z.
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends a six-step hand hygiene technique. Although multiple studies have reported that this technique yields inadequate skin coverage outcomes, they have relied on manual labeling that provided low-resolution estimations of skin coverage outcomes. We have developed a computational system to precisely quantify hand hygiene outcomes and provide high-resolution skin coverage visualizations, thereby improving hygiene techniques. We identified frequently untreated areas located at the dorsal side of the hands around the abductor digiti minimi and the first dorsal interosseous. We also estimated that excluding Steps 3, 6R, and 6L from the six-step hand hygiene technique leads to cumulative coverage loss of less than 1%, indicating the potential redundancy of these steps. Our study demonstrates that the six-step hand hygiene technique could be improved to reduce the untreated areas and remove potentially redundant steps. Furthermore, our system can be used to computationally validate new proposed techniques, and help optimise hand hygiene procedures.
世界卫生组织(WHO)推荐了一种六步手卫生技术。尽管多项研究报告称,这种技术的皮肤覆盖效果不理想,但它们依赖于手动标记,只能提供皮肤覆盖效果的低分辨率估计。我们已经开发了一种计算系统,可以精确量化手卫生效果,并提供高分辨率的皮肤覆盖可视化效果,从而改进卫生技术。我们确定了经常未被处理的区域,这些区域位于手部的背侧,靠近小指展肌和第一背侧骨间肌。我们还估计,将六步手卫生技术中的步骤 3、6R 和 6L 排除在外,累计覆盖损失不到 1%,这表明这些步骤可能存在冗余。我们的研究表明,可以改进六步手卫生技术,以减少未处理区域并去除潜在的冗余步骤。此外,我们的系统可用于计算验证新提出的技术,并帮助优化手部卫生程序。