Hand hygiene behavior change: a review and pilot study of an automated hand hygiene reminder system implementation in a public hospital

Antimicrob Steward Healthc Epidemiol. 2023 Jul 10;3(1):e122. doi: 10.1017/ash.2023.195. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Objective: To review and study implementation of an automated hand hygiene reminder system (AHHRS).

Design: Prospective, nonrandomized, before-after quality improvement pilot study conducted over 6 months.

Setting: Medical-surgical unit (MSU) and medical intensive care unit (MICU) at a public hospital in New York City.

Participants: There were 2,642 healthcare worker observations in the direct observation (DO) period versus 265,505 in the AHHRS period, excluding AHHRS observations collected during the 1-month crossover period when simultaneous DO occurred.

Intervention: We compared hand hygiene adherence (HHA) measured by DO prior to the pilot and after AHHRS implementation. We compared changes in HHA and potential cross-contamination events (CCEs) (room exit and subsequent entry without HHA) from baseline for each biweekly period during the pilot.

Results: Engagement, education/training, data transparency, and optimization period resulted in successful implementation and adoption of the AHHRS. Observations were greater utilizing AHHRS than DO (265,505 vs 2,642, P < .01). Due to the expected Hawthorne effect, HHA was significantly less for AHHRS than DO in MSU (90.99% vs 97.21%, P < .01) and MICU (91.21% vs 98.65%, P < .01). HHA significantly improved from 86.47% to 89.68% in MSU (P < .001) and 85.93% to 91.24% in the MICU (P < .001) from the first biweekly period of AHHRS utilization to the last. CCE decreased from 73.42% to 65.11% in the MSU and significantly decreased from 81.22% to 53.19% in the MICU (P < .05).

Conclusions: We describe how an AHHRS approach was successfully implemented at our facility. With ongoing feedback and system optimization, AHHRS improved HHA and reduced CCE over time.

Publication types

  • Review