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Disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 Australian hospitals

OBJECTIVES: The study aims are twofold. First, to investigate the suitability of hand hygiene as an indicator of accreditation outcomes and, second, to test the hypothesis that hospitals with better accreditation outcomes achieve higher hand hygiene compliance rates. DESIGN: A retrospective, longitu...

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Autores principales: Mumford, Virginia, Greenfield, David, Hogden, Anne, Debono, Deborah, Gospodarevskaya, Elena, Forde, Kevin, Westbrook, Johanna, Braithwaite, Jeffrey
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4173108/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25248496
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005284
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author Mumford, Virginia
Greenfield, David
Hogden, Anne
Debono, Deborah
Gospodarevskaya, Elena
Forde, Kevin
Westbrook, Johanna
Braithwaite, Jeffrey
author_facet Mumford, Virginia
Greenfield, David
Hogden, Anne
Debono, Deborah
Gospodarevskaya, Elena
Forde, Kevin
Westbrook, Johanna
Braithwaite, Jeffrey
author_sort Mumford, Virginia
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: The study aims are twofold. First, to investigate the suitability of hand hygiene as an indicator of accreditation outcomes and, second, to test the hypothesis that hospitals with better accreditation outcomes achieve higher hand hygiene compliance rates. DESIGN: A retrospective, longitudinal, multisite comparative survey. SETTING: Acute public hospitals in New South Wales, Australia. PARTICIPANTS: 96 acute hospitals with accreditation survey results from two surveys during 2009–2012 and submitted data for more than four hand hygiene audits between 2010 and 2013. OUTCOMES: Our primary outcome comprised observational hand hygiene compliance data from eight audits during 2010–2013. The explanatory variables in our multilevel regression model included: accreditation outcomes and scores for the infection control standard; timing of the surveys; and hospital size and activity. RESULTS: Average hand hygiene compliance rates increased from 67.7% to 80.3% during the study period (2010–2013), with 46.7% of hospitals achieving target compliance rates of 70% in audit 1, versus 92.3% in audit 8. Average hand hygiene rates at small hospitals were 7.8 percentage points (pp) higher than those at the largest hospitals (p<0.05). The association between hand hygiene rates, accreditation outcomes and infection control scores is less clear. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that accreditation outcomes and hand hygiene audit data are measuring different parts of the quality and safety spectrum. Understanding what is being measured when selecting indicators to assess the impact of accreditation is critical as focusing on accreditation results would discount successful hand hygiene implementation by smaller hospitals. Conversely, relying on hand hygiene results would discount the infection control related research and leadership investment by larger hospitals. Our hypothesis appears to be confounded by an accreditation programme that makes it more difficult for smaller hospitals to achieve high infection control scores.
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spelling pubmed-41731082014-09-25 Disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 Australian hospitals Mumford, Virginia Greenfield, David Hogden, Anne Debono, Deborah Gospodarevskaya, Elena Forde, Kevin Westbrook, Johanna Braithwaite, Jeffrey BMJ Open Health Services Research OBJECTIVES: The study aims are twofold. First, to investigate the suitability of hand hygiene as an indicator of accreditation outcomes and, second, to test the hypothesis that hospitals with better accreditation outcomes achieve higher hand hygiene compliance rates. DESIGN: A retrospective, longitudinal, multisite comparative survey. SETTING: Acute public hospitals in New South Wales, Australia. PARTICIPANTS: 96 acute hospitals with accreditation survey results from two surveys during 2009–2012 and submitted data for more than four hand hygiene audits between 2010 and 2013. OUTCOMES: Our primary outcome comprised observational hand hygiene compliance data from eight audits during 2010–2013. The explanatory variables in our multilevel regression model included: accreditation outcomes and scores for the infection control standard; timing of the surveys; and hospital size and activity. RESULTS: Average hand hygiene compliance rates increased from 67.7% to 80.3% during the study period (2010–2013), with 46.7% of hospitals achieving target compliance rates of 70% in audit 1, versus 92.3% in audit 8. Average hand hygiene rates at small hospitals were 7.8 percentage points (pp) higher than those at the largest hospitals (p<0.05). The association between hand hygiene rates, accreditation outcomes and infection control scores is less clear. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that accreditation outcomes and hand hygiene audit data are measuring different parts of the quality and safety spectrum. Understanding what is being measured when selecting indicators to assess the impact of accreditation is critical as focusing on accreditation results would discount successful hand hygiene implementation by smaller hospitals. Conversely, relying on hand hygiene results would discount the infection control related research and leadership investment by larger hospitals. Our hypothesis appears to be confounded by an accreditation programme that makes it more difficult for smaller hospitals to achieve high infection control scores. BMJ Publishing Group 2014-09-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4173108/ /pubmed/25248496 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005284 Text en Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
spellingShingle Health Services Research
Mumford, Virginia
Greenfield, David
Hogden, Anne
Debono, Deborah
Gospodarevskaya, Elena
Forde, Kevin
Westbrook, Johanna
Braithwaite, Jeffrey
Disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 Australian hospitals
title Disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 Australian hospitals
title_full Disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 Australian hospitals
title_fullStr Disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 Australian hospitals
title_full_unstemmed Disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 Australian hospitals
title_short Disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 Australian hospitals
title_sort disentangling quality and safety indicator data: a longitudinal, comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96 australian hospitals
topic Health Services Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4173108/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25248496
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005284
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