Promoting Hand Hygiene Compliance PSYGIENE-a Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial of Tailored Interventions

被引:53
|
作者
von Lengerke, Thomas [1 ]
Lutze, Bettina [1 ,2 ]
Krauth, Christian [3 ]
Lange, Karin [1 ]
Stahmeyer, Jona Theodor [3 ]
Chaberny, Iris Freya [2 ,4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Hannover Med Sch, Med Psychol Unit, Ctr Publ Hlth & Healthcare, Hannover, Germany
[2] Leipzig Univ Hosp, Hosp Epidemiol, Inst Hyg, Dept Diagnost, Leipzig, Germany
[3] Hannover Med Sch, Inst Epidemiol Social Med & Hlth Syst Res, Ctr Publ Hlth & Healthcare, Hannover, Germany
[4] Hannover Med Sch, Inst Med Microbiol, Ctr Lab Med, Hannover, Germany
[5] Hannover Med Sch, Hosp Epidemiol, Hannover, Germany
来源
DEUTSCHES ARZTEBLATT INTERNATIONAL | 2017年 / 114卷 / 03期
关键词
INTENSIVE-CARE UNITS; BEHAVIOR-CHANGE; HEALTH-CARE; GUIDELINES; NURSES; PREVALENCE; PREVENTION; PHYSICIANS; INFECTION; CAMPAIGN;
D O I
10.3238/arztebl.2017.0029
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: The German "Clean Hands Campaign" (an adaptation of the WHO "Clean Care is Safer Care" programme) to promote hand hygiene among hospital personnel at Hannover Medical School (MHH, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover), known as Aktion Saubere Hande (ASH), met with initial success. By 2013, however, compliance rates with hygienic hand disinfection in the hospital's ten intensive care units (ICUs) and two hematopoietic stem cell transplantation units (HSCTUs) had relapsed to their initial levels (physicians: 48%; nurses: 56%). The cluster-randomized controlled trial PSYGIENE was conducted to investigate whether interventions tailored in ways suggested by research in behavioral psychology might bring about more sustainable improvements than the ASH. Methods: The "Health Action Process Approach" (HAPA) compliance model specifies key psychological determinants of compliance. These determinants were assessed among health care workers in the ICUs and HSCTUs of the MHH by questionnaire (response rates: physicians: 71%; nurses: 63%) and by interviews of the responsible ward physicians and head nurses (100%). In 2013, 29 tailored behavior change techniques were implemented in educational training sessions and feedback discussions in the six wards that constituted the intervention arm of the trial, while ASH training sessions were provided in the control arm. The compliance rates for 2014 and 2015 (the primary outcomes of the trial) were determined by nonparticipating observation of hygienic hand disinfection, in accordance with the World Health Organization's gold standard. Results: The two groups did not differ in their baseline compliance rates in 2013 (intervention: 54%, control: 55%, p = 0.581). The tailored interventions led to increased compliance in each of the two follow-up years (2014: 64%, p<0.001; 2015: 70%, p = 0.001), while the compliance in the control arm increased to 68% in 2014 (p<0.001) but fell back to 64% in 2015 (p = 0.007). The compliance increases from 2013-2015 and the compliance rate in 2015 were higher in the intervention arm (p<0.005). This was mainly attributable to the nurses' behavior, as the corresponding parameters for physicians did not differ significantly between the two study arms in stratified analysis. Conclusion: Tailored interventions based on behavioral psychology principles led to more sustainable increases in compliance with hand hygiene guidelines than ASH training sessions did. This was true among nurses, and thus also for hospital ward personnel as a whole (i.e., nurses and physicians combined). Further studies are needed to identify more target group-specific interventions that may improve compliance among physicians.
引用
收藏
页码:29 / +
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Impact of psychologically tailored hand hygiene interventions on nosocomial infections with multidrug-resistant organisms: results of the cluster-randomized controlled trial PSYGIENE
    von Lengerke, Thomas
    Ebadi, Ella
    Schock, Bettina
    Krauth, Christian
    Lange, Karin
    Stahmeyer, Jona T.
    Chaberny, Iris F.
    [J]. ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE AND INFECTION CONTROL, 2019, 8 (1)
  • [2] Impact of psychologically tailored hand hygiene interventions on nosocomial infections with multidrug-resistant organisms: results of the cluster-randomized controlled trial PSYGIENE
    Thomas von Lengerke
    Ella Ebadi
    Bettina Schock
    Christian Krauth
    Karin Lange
    Jona T. Stahmeyer
    Iris F. Chaberny
    [J]. Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control, 8
  • [3] Effectiveness of Multifaceted Hand Hygiene Interventions in Long-Term Care Facilities in Hong Kong: A Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial
    Ho, Mei-lin
    Seto, Wing-hong
    Wong, Lai-chin
    Wong, Tin-yau
    [J]. INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2012, 33 (08): : 761 - 767
  • [4] Improving Hand Hygiene Compliance in Nursing Homes: Protocol for a Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial (HANDSOME Study)
    Teesing, Gwen R.
    Erasmus, Vicki
    Petrignani, Mariska
    Koopmans, Marion P. G.
    de Graaf, Miranda
    Vos, Margreet C.
    Klaassen, Corne H. W.
    Verduijn-Leenman, Annette
    Schols, Jos M. G. A.
    Richardus, Jan Hendrik
    Voeten, Helene A. C. M.
    [J]. JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS, 2020, 9 (05):
  • [5] Refining hand washing interventions by identifying active ingredients: A cluster-randomized controlled trial in rural Zimbabwe
    Inauen, Jennifer
    Lilje, Jonathan
    Mosler, Hans-Joachim
    [J]. SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2020, 245
  • [6] Tailored interventions to improve antibiotic use for lower respiratory tract infections in hospitals: A cluster-randomized, controlled trial
    Schouten, Jeroen A.
    Hulscher, Marlies E. J. L.
    Trap-Liefers, Janine
    Akkermans, Reinier P.
    Kullberg, Bart-Jan
    Grol, Richard P. T. M.
    van der Meer, Jos W. M.
    [J]. CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2007, 44 (07) : 931 - 941
  • [7] Increased hand hygiene compliance in nursing homes after a multimodal intervention: A cluster randomized controlled trial (HANDSOME)
    Teesing, Gwen R.
    Erasmus, Vicki
    Nieboer, Daan
    Petrignani, Mariska
    Koopmans, Marion P. G.
    Vos, Margreet C.
    Verduijn-Leenman, Annette
    Schols, Jos M. G. A.
    Richardus, Jan H.
    Voeten, Helene A. C. M.
    [J]. INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2020, 41 (10): : 1169 - 1177
  • [8] Improving hand hygiene compliance in child daycare centres: a randomized controlled trial
    Zomer, T. P.
    Erasmus, V.
    Looman, C. W.
    Van Beeck, E. F.
    Tjon-A-Tsien, A.
    Richardus, J. H.
    Voeten, H. A. C. M.
    [J]. EPIDEMIOLOGY AND INFECTION, 2016, 144 (12): : 2552 - 2560
  • [9] Changing hygiene behaviours: a cluster-randomized trial, Ethiopia
    Aragie, Solomon
    Tadesse, Wondyifraw
    Dagnew, Adane
    Hailu, Dagnachew
    Dubie, Melese
    Wittberg, Dionna M.
    Melo, Jason S.
    Haile, Mahteme
    Zeru, Taye
    Freeman, Matthew C.
    Nash, Scott D.
    Callahan, E. Kelly
    Tadesse, Zerihun
    Arnold, Benjamin F.
    Porco, Travis C.
    Lietman, Thomas M.
    Keenan, Jeremy D.
    [J]. BULLETIN OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION, 2021, 99 (11) : 762 - +
  • [10] Impact of patient and visitor hand hygiene interventions at a pediatric hospital: A stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
    Wong, Matthew W. H.
    Xu, Yan Zhu
    Bone, Jeffrey
    Srigley, Jocelyn A.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INFECTION CONTROL, 2020, 48 (05) : 511 - 516