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2021年6月至2022年8月期间,伯利兹医疗机构改善酒精基洗手液供应和手卫生培训对新冠疫情期间手卫生依从性的影响

The Influence of Improved Access to Alcohol-Based Hand Rub and Hand Hygiene Training in Healthcare Facilities on Hand Hygiene Adherence in Belize During COVID-19: June 2021-August 2022.

作者信息

McDavid Kelsey, Ly Anh N, Bivens Nicholas, Morey Francis, Morazan Gerhaldine, Manzanero Russell, Musa-Diaz Melissa, Medley Alexandra, Murray Kristy O, Lozier Matthew J

机构信息

Division of Foodborne, Waterborne, and Environmental Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.

Department of Pediatrics, National School of Tropical Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children's Hospital, 1102 Bates Ave, Houston, TX 77030, USA.

出版信息

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2025 Mar 28;22(4):514. doi: 10.3390/ijerph22040514.

Abstract

Access to hand hygiene (HH) resources in clinical settings is important to prevent healthcare-associated infections, including COVID-19. However, many countries, including Belize, have limited national data on the availability of HH resources and healthcare worker (HCW) hand hygiene adherence (HHA) in healthcare facilities (HCFs). We conducted a study in the 11 largest public HCFs across Belize to evaluate access to HH resources and HHA before and after an intervention (provision of alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR) wall mounts and HH training). Descriptive statistics and multilevel logistic regressions were used to assess changes in HH resources and HHA from baseline to follow-up and explore factors associated with HHA. There was a 19 percent increase in rooms with functional wall-mounted ABHR dispensers (44% to 63%) post-intervention. HHA did not improve from baseline (52%) to follow-up (50%). Combining baseline and follow-up data, HHA was higher when ABHR and soap and water were present (aOR = 4.19, 95% CI = 2.11, 8.32) and when only ABHR was present (aOR = 3.85, 95% CI = 1.92, 7.72) compared with when soap and water were present alone. The decreased perceived risk of COVID-19 at follow-up may explain the null HHA findings. However, our assessment of HH resources and practices provides a useful foundation for future HH programs in HCFs.

摘要

在临床环境中获取手部卫生(HH)资源对于预防包括COVID-19在内的医疗相关感染至关重要。然而,包括伯利兹在内的许多国家,关于医疗保健机构(HCFs)中HH资源的可用性以及医护人员(HCW)手部卫生依从性(HHA)的国家数据有限。我们在伯利兹11家最大的公共HCFs中开展了一项研究,以评估在进行一项干预措施(提供酒精基洗手液(ABHR)壁挂式装置和HH培训)前后HH资源的获取情况和HHA。使用描述性统计和多水平逻辑回归来评估从基线到随访期间HH资源和HHA 的变化,并探索与HHA相关的因素。干预后,装有可正常使用的壁挂式ABHR分配器的房间增加了19%(从44%增至63%)。HHA从基线时的52%到随访时未得到改善(50%)。综合基线和随访数据,与仅提供肥皂和水的情况相比,同时提供ABHR和肥皂和水时(调整后比值比[aOR]=4.19,95%置信区间[CI]=2.11,8.32)以及仅提供ABHR时(aOR=3.85,95%CI=1.92,7.72),HHA更高。随访时对COVID-19感知风险的降低可能解释了HHA无变化的结果。然而,我们对HH资源和实践的评估为HCFs未来的HH项目提供了有用的基础。

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