Disease Control Department, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, WC1E 7HT, UK.
WaterAid Cambodia, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Sci Rep. 2022 Nov 16;12(1):19646. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-23937-9.
Adequate hand hygiene practices throughout the continuum of care of maternal and newborn health are essential for infection prevention. However, the hand hygiene compliance of facility-based birth attendants, parents and other caregivers along this continuum is low and behavioural-science informed interventions targeting the range of caregivers in both the healthcare facility and home environments are scarce. We assessed the limited efficacy of a novel multimodal behaviour change intervention, delivered at the facility, to improve the hand hygiene practices among midwives and caregivers during childbirth through the return to the home environment. The 6-month intervention was implemented in 4 of 8 purposively selected facilities and included environmental restructuring, hand hygiene infrastructure provision, cues and reminders, and participatory training. In this controlled before-and-after study, the hand hygiene practices of all caregivers present along the care continuum of 99 women and newborns were directly observed. Direct observations took place during three time periods; labour, delivery and immediate aftercare in the facility delivery room, postnatal care in the facility ward and in the home environment within the first 48 h following discharge. Multilevel logistic regression models, adjusted for baseline measures, assessed differences in hand hygiene practices between intervention and control facilities. The intervention was associated with increased odds of improved practice of birth attendants during birth and newborn care in the delivery room (Adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 4.7; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.7, 7.7), and that of parental and non-parental caregivers prior to newborn care in the post-natal care ward (AOR = 9.2; CI = 1.3, 66.2); however, the absolute magnitude of improvements was limited. Intervention effects were not presented for the home environment due COVID-19 related restrictions on observation duration at endline which resulted in too low observation numbers to warrant testing. Our results suggest the potential of a facility-based multimodal behaviour change intervention to improve hand hygiene practices that are critical to maternal and neonatal infection along the continuum of care.
在母婴健康照护的整个过程中,提供充分的手部卫生操作对于预防感染至关重要。然而,在医疗机构中,从产妇到新生儿的各照护者,包括助产士、父母和其他看护者,其手部卫生依从性都很低,并且针对医疗机构和家庭环境中各种照护者的行为科学干预措施也很少。我们评估了一种新的多模式行为改变干预措施的有限效果,该措施在医疗机构中实施,旨在通过返回家庭环境来提高助产士和看护者在分娩期间的手部卫生习惯。该 6 个月的干预措施在 8 家选定医疗机构中的 4 家实施,包括环境重构、提供手部卫生基础设施、提示和提醒以及参与式培训。在这项对照前后研究中,我们直接观察了沿着 99 名妇女和新生儿护理连续体的所有照护者的手部卫生习惯。直接观察在三个时间段进行:分娩时、分娩过程中和在产房内的新生儿照护、在产房病房内的产后照护,以及在出院后 48 小时内的家庭环境中。使用多水平逻辑回归模型,根据基线措施进行调整,评估了干预和对照设施之间手部卫生习惯的差异。该干预措施与提高分娩时和产房新生儿护理期间的分娩参与者的实践改善相关(调整后的优势比 [OR] = 4.7;95%置信区间 [CI] = 2.7,7.7),以及在产后病房新生儿护理前的父母和非父母看护者的实践改善相关(OR = 9.2;CI = 1.3,66.2);然而,改善的绝对幅度有限。由于 COVID-19 对最终线观察时间的限制,导致观察数量过低,无法进行检验,因此无法在家庭环境中呈现干预效果。我们的结果表明,基于医疗机构的多模式行为改变干预措施具有改善连续护理中与母婴感染相关的手部卫生习惯的潜力。