Hand hygiene compliance rates: Fact or fiction?

被引:34
|
作者
McLaws, Mary-Louise [1 ]
Kwok, Yell Lee Angela [2 ]
机构
[1] UNSW Sydney, Sch Publ Hlth & Community Med, Epidemiol Healthcare Associated Infect & Infect D, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[2] UNSW Australia, Sch Publ Hlth & Community Med, Sydney, NSW, Australia
关键词
Automation; Surveillance; Electronic; Technology; Human; Hawthorne effect; Reporting; Error; Bias; HEALTH-CARE WORKERS; HOW2; BENCHMARK; MONITORING-SYSTEM; OPPORTUNITIES; SURVEILLANCE; TECHNOLOGIES; FEEDBACK; COHORT; UNIT;
D O I
10.1016/j.ajic.2018.03.030
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: The mandatory national hand hygiene program requires Australian public hospitals to use direct human auditing to establish compliance rates. To establish the magnitude of the Hawthorne effect, we compared direct human audit rates with concurrent automated surveillance rates. Methods: A large tertiary Australian teaching hospital previously trialed automated surveillance while simultaneously performing mandatory human audits for 20 minutes daily on a medical and a surgical ward. Subtracting automated surveillance rates from human audit rates provided differences in percentage points (PPs) for each of the 3 quarterly reporting periods for 2014 and 2015. Results: Direct human audit rates for the medical ward were inflated by an average of 55 PPs in 2014 and 64 PPs in 2015, 2.8-3.1 times higher than automated surveillance rates. The rates for the surgical ward were inflated by an average of 32 PPs in 2014 and 31 PPs in 2015, 1.6 times higher than automated surveillance rates. Over the 6 mandatory reporting quarters, human audits collected an average of 255 opportunities, whereas automation collected 578 times more data, averaging 147,308 opportunities per quarter. The magnitude of the Hawthorne effect on direct human auditing was not trivial and produced highly inflated compliance rates. Conclusions: Mandatory compliance necessitates accuracy that only automated surveillance can achieve, whereas daily hand hygiene ambassadors or reminder technology could harness clinicians' ability to hyperrespond to produce habitual compliance. Crown Copyright (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:876 / 880
页数:5
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