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General Orthopaedics

WHAT DO WE REALLY KNOW ABOUT HAND DISINFECTION PERFORMANCE DURING PATIENT CARE ON SURGICAL WARDS?

The European Bone and Joint Infection Society (EBJIS) Meeting, Barcelona, Spain, 26–28 September 2024.



Abstract

Aim

Hand-disinfection (HD) is the most effective infection-prevention-measure. HD-performance of health care professionals (HCP) is usually evaluated by compliance observations (CO). The Hawthorne effect (HE) (HCP behave differently under observation) is considered to systematically increase HD-compliance-rates during CO. However, little is known about the specifications of the HE in health care settings. We hypothesized that, due to hand-hygiene`s known impact on patient safety and infection-prevention, the HE does not affect HD performance during direct patient care in patient-rooms.

Method

We conducted a prospective observational trial on an 18-bed surgical intensive care unit (ICU), a 12-bed surgical intermediate care unit (IMC) and a 36-bed surgical normal ward (NW) in a university hospital in Germany. Dispensers of hand sanitizers were equipped with an electronic monitoring system (EMS) (GWA Hygiene, Germany), which recorded the number of HDs per patient hour (HD/PH) and time and location of hand-disinfections. Locations were categorized as follows: 1. Patient rooms (PR); 2. Utility- and waste-disposal-rooms (UWR) and 3. Other rooms (hallways, kitchen, toilets etc.) (OR). Additionally trained infection-control-staff performed hand-hygiene CO according to WHO's Five Moments. The HD/PH during CO was compared to the HD/PH during the same time-periods without CO. Additionally the ratio between HD/PD-change during CO and mean-HD/PD of each ward during the study-period was determined in percentages. Descriptive and analytical statistics were calculated using R. P-values ≤ 0.05 were regarded as significant.

Results

587.128 HD were electronically recorded during the study-period (February 2022 to May 2023) and CO took place on 72 days. We recorded a significant increase of HD/PH during CO on all three wards in PRs (ICU: 21%, p<0.001; IMC: 11%, p=0.029; NW: 49%, p=0.047). Furthermore we detected a significant increase of HD/PH during CO on ICU (10%, p<0.001) and IMC (11%, p=0.033) in ORs. CO did not significantly affect HD/PH in ORs on NW and in UWR on all three wards.

Conclusions

In our setting, the number of hand-disinfections per patient-hour was significantly increased during compliance-observations especially in patient-rooms, where hand-hygiene is most crucial for infection-prevention. This indicates a lower everyday compliance to WHO`s hand-hygiene indications during patient care than determined by compliance-observations.

Acknowledgments

Paul-Hartmann AG financially supported this study.


Email: Robin Otchwemah