Ganesan Vithiya, Sundaramurthy Raja, Thiruvanamalai Rajendran, Raghavan Monica, Chavan Sunil Kumar D, Pusa Rajeshwari, Sakthivadivel Varatharajan, Gaur Archana, Balan Yuvaraj
Department of Microbiology, Velammal Medical College Hospital and Research Institute, Madurai, IND.
Department of Microbiology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bibinagar, Hyderabad, IND.
Cureus. 2022 May 22;14(5):e25221. doi: 10.7759/cureus.25221. eCollection 2022 May.
Background Over the years, there has been an increase in hospital-acquired infections (HAIs) among patients in India. One of the main reasons is a lack of compliance with infection control guidelines, such as hand hygiene. So the present study was conducted to determine the compliance of hand hygiene among healthcare workers in a private tertiary care teaching hospital in South India. Materials and methods The prospective observational study was carried out between April 2017 and March 2020. Nineteen areas were directly observed for hand hygiene (HH) compliance. At each location, HH audit was conducted for one hour per day for five days per month. HH complete adherence rate (HHCAR) and HH partial adherence rate (HHPAR) were analyzed. Results Nine hundred and twenty observation periods were completed during the entire study period. Overall, hand hygiene complete adherence rate was 29.9% (11,981/39,998); partial adherence rate was 45.3% (18,131/39,998) and the non-adherence rate was 24.7% (9886/39,998). A better adherence rate was seen among nurses (44.7%), followed by other staff (33.7%) and doctors (33.04%). Moment-specific adherence rates show almost equal adherence rates of 50.7%, 50.75%, and 50.1%, respectively, for moments 2, 3, and 4, and comparatively low for moments 1 and 5 (48.4% and 47.6%, respectively). Conclusion Despite adequate hand hygiene facilities, compliance remains low. Hand hygiene is a bundle care approach that needs to consider factors including healthcare staff, clinical, institutional, environmental, and behavioral changes. Multimodal interventions and multidisciplinary commitment are mandatory for sustained compliance.
背景 多年来,印度患者中医院获得性感染(HAIs)的数量一直在增加。主要原因之一是缺乏对感染控制指南的遵守,如手部卫生。因此,本研究旨在确定印度南部一家私立三级护理教学医院医护人员的手部卫生遵守情况。材料与方法 前瞻性观察研究于2017年4月至2020年3月进行。对19个区域的手部卫生(HH)遵守情况进行直接观察。在每个地点,每月连续5天每天进行1小时的HH审核。分析HH完全遵守率(HHCAR)和HH部分遵守率(HHPAR)。结果 在整个研究期间共完成了920个观察期。总体而言,手部卫生完全遵守率为29.9%(11981/39998);部分遵守率为45.3%(18131/39998),不遵守率为24.7%(9886/39998)。护士的遵守率更高(44.7%),其次是其他工作人员(33.7%)和医生(33.04%)。特定时刻的遵守率显示,第2、3和4时刻的遵守率几乎相等,分别为50.7%、50.75%和50.1%,而第1和5时刻相对较低(分别为48.4%和47.6%)。结论 尽管有足够的手部卫生设施,但遵守率仍然很低。手部卫生是一种综合护理方法,需要考虑医护人员、临床、机构、环境和行为变化等因素。多模式干预和多学科承诺对于持续遵守是必不可少的。