Ten years of hand hygiene excellence: a summary of outcomes, and a comparison of indicators, from award-winning hospitals worldwide

Ermira Tartari, Jacopo Garlasco, Marcela Hernández-de Mezerville, Moi Lin Ling, Hilda Márquez-Villarreal, Wing-Hong Seto, Anne Simon, Thomas-Jörg Hennig, Didier Pittet
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Abstract

Hand hygiene is a crucial measure for the prevention of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs). The Hand Hygiene Excellence Award (HHEA) is an international programme acknowledging healthcare facilities for their leadership in implementing hand hygiene improvement programmes, including the World Health Organisation’s Multimodal Improvement Strategy. This study aimed at summarising the results of the HHEA campaign between 2010 and 2021 and investigating the relationship between different hand hygiene parameters based on data from participating healthcare facilities. A retrospective analysis was performed on datasets from HHEA forms, including data on hand hygiene compliance, alcohol-based handrub (ABHR) consumption, and Hand Hygiene Self-Assessment Framework (HHSAF) scores. Descriptive statistics were reported for each variable. The correlation between variables was inspected through Kendall’s test, while possible non-linear relationships between hand hygiene compliance, ABHR consumption and HHSAF scores were sought through the Locally Estimated Scatterplot Smoothing or logistic regression models. A tree-structured partitioning model was developed to further confirm the obtained findings. Ninety-seven healthcare facilities from 28 countries in three world regions (Asia-Pacific, Europe, Latin America) were awarded the HHEA and thus included in the analysis. HHSAF scores indicated an advanced hand hygiene promotion level (median 445 points, IQR 395–480). System change (100 [95–100] points) and institutional safety climate (85 [70–95] points) showed the highest and lowest score, respectively. In most cases, hand hygiene compliance was above 70%, with heterogeneity between countries. ABHR consumption above 20 millilitres per patient-day (ml/PD) was widely reported, with overall increasing trends. HHSAF scores were positively correlated with hand hygiene compliance (τ = 0.211, p = 0.007). We observed a positive correlation between compliance rates and ABHR consumption (τ = 0.193, p < 0.001), although the average predicted consumption was stable around 55–60 ml/PD for compliance rates above 80–85%. Logistic regression and partitioning tree analyses revealed that higher HHSAF scores were more likely in the high-ABHR consumption group at cut-offs around 57–59 ml/PD. Ten years after its inception, the HHEA proves to be a valuable hand hygiene improvement programme in healthcare facilities worldwide. Consistent results were provided by the different hand hygiene indicators and the HHSAF score represents a valuable proxy measure of hand hygiene compliance.
卓越手卫生十年:全球获奖医院的成果总结和指标比较
手部卫生是预防医疗相关感染(HAIs)的关键措施。手部卫生卓越奖(HHEA)是一项国际计划,旨在表彰医疗机构在实施手部卫生改进计划(包括世界卫生组织的多模式改进策略)方面的领导作用。本研究旨在总结 2010 年至 2021 年间 HHEA 活动的成果,并根据参与活动的医疗机构的数据调查不同手部卫生参数之间的关系。研究对HHEA表格中的数据集进行了回顾性分析,包括手部卫生依从性、酒精搓手液(ABHR)消耗量和手部卫生自我评估框架(HHSAF)评分等数据。报告了每个变量的描述性统计。变量之间的相关性通过 Kendall 检验进行检验,而手部卫生依从性、酒精搓手液用量和 HHSAF 分数之间可能存在的非线性关系则通过局部估计散点图平滑或逻辑回归模型进行检验。为了进一步证实所获得的研究结果,我们建立了一个树状结构的分区模型。来自全球三个地区(亚太、欧洲和拉丁美洲)28 个国家的 97 家医疗机构获得了 HHEA,因此被纳入分析范围。HHSAF 分数表明手卫生推广水平达到了高级水平(中位数为 445 分,IQR 为 395-480)。系统变化(100 [95-100] 分)和机构安全氛围(85 [70-95] 分)的得分分别最高和最低。在大多数情况下,手部卫生依从性高于 70%,但各国之间存在差异。每名患者每天的 ABHR 消耗量超过 20 毫升(ml/PD)的报道非常普遍,总体呈上升趋势。HHSAF 评分与手卫生依从性呈正相关(τ = 0.211,p = 0.007)。我们观察到,依从率与 ABHR 消耗量呈正相关(τ = 0.193,p < 0.001),尽管依从率高于 80-85% 时,平均预测消耗量稳定在 55-60 毫升/PD 左右。逻辑回归和分区树分析表明,在 57-59 ml/PD 左右的临界值时,HHSAF 分数较高的人更有可能属于高ABHR 消耗量组。HHEA 推出十年后,在全球医疗机构中被证明是一项非常有价值的手部卫生改进计划。不同的手部卫生指标提供了一致的结果,而 HHSAF 分数则是衡量手部卫生依从性的重要替代指标。
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