Abstract
Objective: To describe nurse hand hygiene practices in the home health care setting (HHC), nurse adherence to hand hygiene guidelines, and factors associated with hand hygiene opportunities during home care visits.
Design: Observational study of nurse hand hygiene practices.
Setting and Participants: Licensed practical/vocational and registered nurses were observed in the homes of patients being served by a large non-profit HHC agency.
Methods: Two researchers observed 400 home care visits conducted by 50 nurses. The World Health Organization’s “5 Moments for Hand Hygiene” validated observation tool was used to record opportunities and actual practices of hand hygiene, with three additional opportunities specific to the HHC setting. Patient assessment data available in the agency electronic health record and a nurse demographic questionnaire were also collected to describe patients and nurse participants.
Results: A total of 2014 opportunities were observed. Upon arrival in the home was the most frequent opportunity (N=384), the least frequent was after touching a patient’s surroundings (N=43). The average hand hygiene adherence rate was 45.6% after adjusting for clustering at the nurse-level. Adherence was highest after contact with body fluid (65.1%); lowest after touching a patient (29.5%). The number of hand hygiene opportunities was higher when patients being served were at increased risk of an infection-related emergent department visit or hospitalization and when the home environment was observed to be “dirty”. No nurse or patient demographic characteristics were associated with the rate of nurse hand hygiene adherence.
Conclusions and Implications: Hand hygiene adherence in HHC is suboptimal, with rates mirroring those reported in hospital and outpatient settings. The connection between poor hand hygiene and infection transmission has been well studied and it has received widespread attention with the outbreak of SARS-CoV-2. Agencies can use results found in this study to better inform quality improvement initiatives.
Design: Observational study of nurse hand hygiene practices.
Setting and Participants: Licensed practical/vocational and registered nurses were observed in the homes of patients being served by a large non-profit HHC agency.
Methods: Two researchers observed 400 home care visits conducted by 50 nurses. The World Health Organization’s “5 Moments for Hand Hygiene” validated observation tool was used to record opportunities and actual practices of hand hygiene, with three additional opportunities specific to the HHC setting. Patient assessment data available in the agency electronic health record and a nurse demographic questionnaire were also collected to describe patients and nurse participants.
Results: A total of 2014 opportunities were observed. Upon arrival in the home was the most frequent opportunity (N=384), the least frequent was after touching a patient’s surroundings (N=43). The average hand hygiene adherence rate was 45.6% after adjusting for clustering at the nurse-level. Adherence was highest after contact with body fluid (65.1%); lowest after touching a patient (29.5%). The number of hand hygiene opportunities was higher when patients being served were at increased risk of an infection-related emergent department visit or hospitalization and when the home environment was observed to be “dirty”. No nurse or patient demographic characteristics were associated with the rate of nurse hand hygiene adherence.
Conclusions and Implications: Hand hygiene adherence in HHC is suboptimal, with rates mirroring those reported in hospital and outpatient settings. The connection between poor hand hygiene and infection transmission has been well studied and it has received widespread attention with the outbreak of SARS-CoV-2. Agencies can use results found in this study to better inform quality improvement initiatives.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of the American Medical Directors Association |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 20 Jul 2020 |