Infection Prevention and Control Hub and Task Force, Department of Integrated Health Services, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland; Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Malta, Msida, Malta.
Department for Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
Lancet Glob Health. 2024 Oct;12(10):e1620-e1628. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(24)00277-8.
WHO infection prevention and control (IPC) minimum requirements provide standards to reduce the risk of infection during health-care delivery. We aimed to investigate the global implementation of these requirements at national levels and the progress of doing so across 2021-22 compared with 2017-18 to identify future directions for interventions.
National IPC focal points were invited to complete an online survey measuring IPC minimum requirements from July 19, 2021, to Jan 31, 2022. The primary outcome was the proportion of countries meeting IPC minimum requirements. Country characteristics associated with this outcome were assessed with beta regression. Subset analyses were conducted to compare the 2021-22 indicators with a WHO IPC survey conducted in 2017-18 and to assess the correlation of the proportion of IPC minimum requirements met with the results of other WHO metrics.
106 countries (ie, 13 low income, 27 lower-middle income, 33 upper-middle income, and 33 high income) participated in the survey (56% response rate). Four (4%) of 106 met all IPC minimum requirements. The highest scoring IPC core component was multimodal improvement strategies and the lowest was IPC education and training. The odds of meeting IPC minimum requirements was higher among high-income countries compared with low-income countries (adjusted odds ratio 2·7, 95% CI 1·3-5·8; p=0·020). Compared with the 2017-18 survey, there was a significant increase in the proportion of countries reporting an active national IPC programme (65% to 82%, p=0·037) and a dedicated budget (26% to 44%, p=0·037). Evaluation of the IPC minimum requirements compared with other survey instruments revealed a low positive correlation.
To build resilient health systems capable of withstanding future health threats, urgently scaling up adherence to WHO IPC minimum requirements is essential.
WHO.
For the French and Spanish translations of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.
世界卫生组织(WHO)感染预防和控制(IPC)最低要求提供了降低医疗保健过程中感染风险的标准。我们旨在调查这些要求在国家层面上的全球实施情况,以及与 2017-18 年相比,2021-22 年在这方面的进展情况,以确定未来干预措施的方向。
我们邀请国家 IPC 联络点于 2021 年 7 月 19 日至 2022 年 1 月 31 日期间在线完成一项衡量 IPC 最低要求的调查。主要结果是达到 IPC 最低要求的国家比例。使用贝塔回归评估与这一结果相关的国家特征。进行了亚组分析,以比较 2021-22 年的指标与 2017-18 年 WHO IPC 调查的结果,并评估符合 IPC 最低要求比例与 WHO 其他指标结果的相关性。
106 个国家(即 13 个低收入国家、27 个中下收入国家、33 个中上收入国家和 33 个高收入国家)参加了这项调查(回应率为 56%)。在 106 个国家中,只有 4 个(4%)国家完全达到 IPC 最低要求。IPC 核心组成部分中得分最高的是多模式改进策略,得分最低的是 IPC 教育和培训。与低收入国家相比,高收入国家达到 IPC 最低要求的可能性更高(调整后的比值比 2.7,95%置信区间 1.3-5.8;p=0.020)。与 2017-18 年的调查相比,报告国家积极开展 IPC 方案(65%至 82%,p=0.037)和有专门预算(26%至 44%,p=0.037)的国家比例显著增加。对 IPC 最低要求的评估与其他调查工具相比,显示出低正相关性。
为了建立有能力抵御未来卫生威胁的有韧性的卫生系统,迫切需要扩大对 WHO IPC 最低要求的遵守。
WHO。