Cargando…

Measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units

Background: To estimate hand hygiene compliance using electronic hand hygiene monitoring, the number of hand hygiene opportunities (HHOs) per period must be known in a given setting. Data on the number of HHOs in a neonatal ICU (NICU) are limited. We measured HHOs per hour and identified factors tha...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lee, Eugene, Al-Muthree, Souad, Reason, Paige, Donohue, Meghan, Dunn, Michael, Statchuk, Meghan, Khan, Sarah, Gupta-Bhatnagar, Shikha, El-Helou, Salhab, Leis, Jerome, Mertz, Dominik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10594324/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.319
_version_ 1785124624010313728
author Lee, Eugene
Al-Muthree, Souad
Reason, Paige
Donohue, Meghan
Dunn, Michael
Statchuk, Meghan
Khan, Sarah
Gupta-Bhatnagar, Shikha
El-Helou, Salhab
Leis, Jerome
Mertz, Dominik
author_facet Lee, Eugene
Al-Muthree, Souad
Reason, Paige
Donohue, Meghan
Dunn, Michael
Statchuk, Meghan
Khan, Sarah
Gupta-Bhatnagar, Shikha
El-Helou, Salhab
Leis, Jerome
Mertz, Dominik
author_sort Lee, Eugene
collection PubMed
description Background: To estimate hand hygiene compliance using electronic hand hygiene monitoring, the number of hand hygiene opportunities (HHOs) per period must be known in a given setting. Data on the number of HHOs in a neonatal ICU (NICU) are limited. We measured HHOs per hour and identified factors that may influence the number of HHOs per hour to calibrate compliance estimates for electronic hand hygiene monitoring. Methods: The study was conducted in 2 large NICUs in Ontario, Canada (72 and 42 beds, respectively). We centrally trained observers to identify HHOs using the Ontario-based “Four Moments of Hand Hygiene,” which is similar to combining moments 4 and 5 of the WHO “Five Moments of Hand Hygiene.” To apply the moments of hand hygiene to the NICU setting, the following modifications were made: moment 1 was entering the incubator or contact with anything within the ‘baby space’ directly around the incubator, and moment 4 was when hands exited the incubator and, as such, the ‘baby space.’ Using a standardized tool, the investigators conducted direct observation of HHOs during randomized observation periods from July 1, 2022, to January 9, 2023. In addition to HHOs, data on covariables potentially associated with the frequency of HHOs were collected: time and day of the week, acuity, additional precautions, corrected gestational age, and private versus multibed room or open pod. Results: We audited HHOs for 146 hours including 26 at site A and 120 at site B. Overall, 804 HHOs (69.2%) occurred during weekdays and 739 (63.6%) occurred during day shifts from 7:00 a.m. to7:00 p.m. The most frequent moments of hand hygiene were moment 1 (47.8%, before contact) and moment 4 (36.8%, after contact). The average numbers of HHOs were 7.8 per hour overall, 7.6 per hour on weekdays, 7.7 per hour on weekends, 8.8 per hour on day shifts, and 6.8 per hour on night shifts. The breakdown of HHOs by profession was 92.8% nurses, 0.6% physicians, 4.5% allied health, and 2.1% for others. Discussion: The rate of HHOs in NICU varied over a 24-hour period and was similar between 2 different NICUs. Evenings and weekends had considerably fewer average HHOs, and peaks were observed following nursing shift changes. The rate of HHOs may be influenced by other factors including unit design, patient acuity, and use of transmission-based precautions. Further analysis using a Poisson regression model will help to explore these factors and to calibrate electronic monitoring for this population. Disclosures: None
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10594324
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105943242023-10-25 Measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units Lee, Eugene Al-Muthree, Souad Reason, Paige Donohue, Meghan Dunn, Michael Statchuk, Meghan Khan, Sarah Gupta-Bhatnagar, Shikha El-Helou, Salhab Leis, Jerome Mertz, Dominik Antimicrob Steward Healthc Epidemiol Hand Hygiene Background: To estimate hand hygiene compliance using electronic hand hygiene monitoring, the number of hand hygiene opportunities (HHOs) per period must be known in a given setting. Data on the number of HHOs in a neonatal ICU (NICU) are limited. We measured HHOs per hour and identified factors that may influence the number of HHOs per hour to calibrate compliance estimates for electronic hand hygiene monitoring. Methods: The study was conducted in 2 large NICUs in Ontario, Canada (72 and 42 beds, respectively). We centrally trained observers to identify HHOs using the Ontario-based “Four Moments of Hand Hygiene,” which is similar to combining moments 4 and 5 of the WHO “Five Moments of Hand Hygiene.” To apply the moments of hand hygiene to the NICU setting, the following modifications were made: moment 1 was entering the incubator or contact with anything within the ‘baby space’ directly around the incubator, and moment 4 was when hands exited the incubator and, as such, the ‘baby space.’ Using a standardized tool, the investigators conducted direct observation of HHOs during randomized observation periods from July 1, 2022, to January 9, 2023. In addition to HHOs, data on covariables potentially associated with the frequency of HHOs were collected: time and day of the week, acuity, additional precautions, corrected gestational age, and private versus multibed room or open pod. Results: We audited HHOs for 146 hours including 26 at site A and 120 at site B. Overall, 804 HHOs (69.2%) occurred during weekdays and 739 (63.6%) occurred during day shifts from 7:00 a.m. to7:00 p.m. The most frequent moments of hand hygiene were moment 1 (47.8%, before contact) and moment 4 (36.8%, after contact). The average numbers of HHOs were 7.8 per hour overall, 7.6 per hour on weekdays, 7.7 per hour on weekends, 8.8 per hour on day shifts, and 6.8 per hour on night shifts. The breakdown of HHOs by profession was 92.8% nurses, 0.6% physicians, 4.5% allied health, and 2.1% for others. Discussion: The rate of HHOs in NICU varied over a 24-hour period and was similar between 2 different NICUs. Evenings and weekends had considerably fewer average HHOs, and peaks were observed following nursing shift changes. The rate of HHOs may be influenced by other factors including unit design, patient acuity, and use of transmission-based precautions. Further analysis using a Poisson regression model will help to explore these factors and to calibrate electronic monitoring for this population. Disclosures: None Cambridge University Press 2023-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC10594324/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.319 Text en © The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Hand Hygiene
Lee, Eugene
Al-Muthree, Souad
Reason, Paige
Donohue, Meghan
Dunn, Michael
Statchuk, Meghan
Khan, Sarah
Gupta-Bhatnagar, Shikha
El-Helou, Salhab
Leis, Jerome
Mertz, Dominik
Measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units
title Measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units
title_full Measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units
title_fullStr Measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units
title_full_unstemmed Measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units
title_short Measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units
title_sort measuring hand hygiene opportunities per hour across two neonatal intensive care units
topic Hand Hygiene
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10594324/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.319
work_keys_str_mv AT leeeugene measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT almuthreesouad measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT reasonpaige measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT donohuemeghan measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT dunnmichael measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT statchukmeghan measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT khansarah measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT guptabhatnagarshikha measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT elhelousalhab measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT leisjerome measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits
AT mertzdominik measuringhandhygieneopportunitiesperhouracrosstwoneonatalintensivecareunits