COVID-19 大流行期间危地马拉医护人员坚持手部卫生的相关因素。

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
N. Fahsen , P. Garzaro , M.J. Lozier , C.Q. Pratt , C. Craig , K. McDavid , D. Vega Ocasio , C. Cordon-Rosales , D.R. Call , B.M. Ramay
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:目的:我们制作了酒精擦手液(ABHR)并向危地马拉克萨尔特南戈(Quetzaltenango)的19家公立一级和二级医疗机构分发,同时开展了手卫生观察,以评估医护人员(HCWs)的手卫生依从性,并确定与这一做法相关的因素。医护人员遵守卫生习惯的定义是用肥皂和水洗手或使用ABHR:在分发 ABHR 之前(2021 年,基线)和之后(2022 年,随访)进行了观察,以评估保健卫生习惯随时间的演变。我们使用二元比较和混合效应逻辑回归模型来探究HH遵守情况与以下自变量之间的关联:医疗机构级别、接触类型、HH执行时间、医护人员的职业类别和存在的材料(如水、肥皂、ABHR):在每个时间点,我们分别观察到 67 名和 82 名医护人员与 243 名和 300 名患者进行了互动。在两个观察期中,HH 的坚持率都很低(基线时为 40%,随访时为 35%)。在侵入性接触过程中、接触患者后以及如果医护人员是医生,医护人员更有可能坚持使用 HHH:结论:HHH 的依从性因情况而异,这强调了解决行为改变的多种决定因素以提高依从性的重要性。这就需要采用多模式方法实施干预,其中既包括增加获得保健材料和基础设施的机会,也包括保健教育和培训、监测和反馈、提醒以及促进保健安全文化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Factors associated with hand hygiene adherence among healthcare workers in Guatemala during the COVID-19 pandemic

Background

Healthcare-associated infections are prevalent in low- and middle-income countries and may be reduced through proper hand hygiene (HH) adherence during patient care.

Aim

We produced and distributed alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR) to 19 public primary- and secondary-level healthcare facilities in Quetzaltenango, Guatemala, and carried out HH observations to assess healthcare workers' (HCWs) HH adherence, and to identify factors associated with this practice. HH adherence was defined as washing hands with soap and water or using ABHR.

Methods

Observations were conducted before (2021, baseline) and after (2022, follow-up) ABHR distribution to evaluate the evolution of HH practices over time. Bivariate comparisons and mixed-effects logistic regression models were used to explore associations between HH adherence and the following independent variables: healthcare facility level, type of contact performed, timing of HH performance, occupational category of HCW and materials present (e.g., water, soap, ABHR).

Findings

We observed 243 and 300 patient interactions among 67 and 82 HCWs at each time point, respectively. HH adherence was low for both observation periods (40% at baseline and 35% at follow-up). HCWs were more likely to adhere to HH during invasive contacts, after patient contact, and if the HCW was a physician.

Conclusion

HH adherence varied by scenario, which underscores the importance of addressing multiple determinants of behaviour change to improve adherence. This requires interventions implemented with a multi-modal approach that includes both increasing access to HH materials and infrastructure, as well as HH education and training, monitoring and feedback, reminders, and promoting a HH safety culture.

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来源期刊
Journal of Hospital Infection
Journal of Hospital Infection 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
12.70
自引率
5.80%
发文量
271
审稿时长
19 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Hospital Infection is the editorially independent scientific publication of the Healthcare Infection Society. The aim of the Journal is to publish high quality research and information relating to infection prevention and control that is relevant to an international audience. The Journal welcomes submissions that relate to all aspects of infection prevention and control in healthcare settings. This includes submissions that: provide new insight into the epidemiology, surveillance, or prevention and control of healthcare-associated infections and antimicrobial resistance in healthcare settings; provide new insight into cleaning, disinfection and decontamination; provide new insight into the design of healthcare premises; describe novel aspects of outbreaks of infection; throw light on techniques for effective antimicrobial stewardship; describe novel techniques (laboratory-based or point of care) for the detection of infection or antimicrobial resistance in the healthcare setting, particularly if these can be used to facilitate infection prevention and control; improve understanding of the motivations of safe healthcare behaviour, or describe techniques for achieving behavioural and cultural change; improve understanding of the use of IT systems in infection surveillance and prevention and control.
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