Assessing the impact of a cleaning programme on environmental hygiene in labour and neonatal wards: an exploratory study in The Gambia

Uduak Okomo, Giorgia Gon, Saffiatou Darboe, Isatou C. M. Sey, Oluwatosin Nkereuwem, Lamin Leigh, Nfamara Camara, Lamin Makalo, Abdoulie Keita, Stephanie J. Dancer, Wendy Graham, Alexander M. Aiken
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Abstract

Effective surface cleaning in hospitals is crucial to prevent the transmission of pathogens. However, hospitals in low- and middle-income countries face cleaning challenges due to limited resources and inadequate training. We assessed the effectiveness of a modified TEACH CLEAN programme for trainers in reducing surface microbiological contamination in the newborn unit of a tertiary referral hospital in The Gambia. We utilised a quasi-experimental design and compared data against those from the labour ward. Direct observations of cleaning practices and key informant interviews were also conducted to clarify the programme's impact. Between July and September 2021 (pre-intervention) and October and December 2021 (post-intervention), weekly surface sampling was performed in the newborn unit and labour ward. The training package was delivered in October 2021, after which their surface microbiological contamination deteriorated in both clinical settings. While some cleaning standards improved, critical aspects such as using fresh cleaning cloths and the one-swipe method did not. Interviews with senior departmental and hospital management staff revealed ongoing challenges in the health system that hindered the ability to improve cleaning practices, including COVID-19, understaffing, disruptions to water supply and shortages of cleaning materials. Keeping a hospital clean is fundamental to good care, but training hospital cleaning staff in this low-income country neonatal unit failed to reduce surface contamination levels. Further qualitative investigation revealed multiple external factors that challenged any possible impact of the cleaning programme. Further work is needed to address barriers to hospital cleaning in low-income hospitals.
评估清洁计划对产房和新生儿病房环境卫生的影响:冈比亚的一项探索性研究
有效的医院表面清洁对防止病原体传播至关重要。然而,由于资源有限和培训不足,中低收入国家的医院面临着清洁方面的挑战。我们对冈比亚一家三级转诊医院的新生儿科在减少表面微生物污染方面的效果进行了评估。我们采用了准实验设计,并将数据与产房的数据进行了比较。此外,我们还对清洁实践进行了直接观察,并对关键信息提供者进行了访谈,以明确该计划的影响。2021 年 7 月至 9 月(干预前)和 2021 年 10 月至 12 月(干预后)期间,我们每周在新生儿病房和产房进行表面取样。培训包于 2021 年 10 月交付,此后,两个临床环境的表面微生物污染情况均有所恶化。虽然某些清洁标准有所改善,但使用新清洁布和一擦即净法等关键环节并未改善。与高级部门和医院管理人员的访谈显示,卫生系统持续面临的挑战阻碍了清洁工作的改进,包括 COVID-19、人员不足、供水中断和清洁材料短缺。保持医院清洁是做好护理工作的基础,但在这个低收入国家的新生儿科,对医院清洁人员的培训未能降低表面污染水平。进一步的定性调查显示,多种外部因素对清洁计划可能产生的影响构成了挑战。需要进一步开展工作,解决低收入医院在医院清洁方面遇到的障碍。
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