Publication:
"The 3/3 strategy": a successful multifaceted hospital wide hand hygiene intervention based on WHO and continuous quality improvement methodology.

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Date

2012-10-22

Authors

Mestre, Gabriel
Berbel, Cristina
Tortajada, Purificación
Alarcia, Margarita
Coca, Roser
Gallemi, Gema
Garcia, Irene
Fernández, Mari Mar
Aguilar, Mari Carmen
Martínez, José Antonio

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Public Library of Science
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Abstract

BACKGROUND Only multifaceted hospital wide interventions have been successful in achieving sustained improvements in hand hygiene (HH) compliance. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS Pre-post intervention study of HH performance at baseline (October 2007-December 2009) and during intervention, which included two phases. Phase 1 (2010) included multimodal WHO approach. Phase 2 (2011) added Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) tools and was based on: a) Increase of alcohol hand rub (AHR) solution placement (from 0.57 dispensers/bed to 1.56); b) Increase in frequency of audits (three days every three weeks: "3/3 strategy"); c) Implementation of a standardized register form of HH corrective actions; d) Statistical Process Control (SPC) as time series analysis methodology through appropriate control charts. During the intervention period we performed 819 scheduled direct observation audits which provided data from 11,714 HH opportunities. The most remarkable findings were: a) significant improvements in HH compliance with respect to baseline (25% mean increase); b) sustained high level (82%) of HH compliance during intervention; c) significant increase in AHRs consumption over time; c) significant decrease in the rate of healthcare-acquired MRSA; d) small but significant improvements in HH compliance when comparing phase 2 to phase 1 [79.5% (95% CI: 78.2-80.7) vs 84.6% (95% CI:83.8-85.4), p<0.05]; e) successful use of control charts to identify significant negative and positive deviations (special causes) related to the HH compliance process over time ("positive": 90.1% as highest HH compliance coinciding with the "World hygiene day"; and "negative":73.7% as lowest HH compliance coinciding with a statutory lay-off proceeding). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE CQI tools may be a key addition to WHO strategy to maintain a good HH performance over time. In addition, SPC has shown to be a powerful methodology to detect special causes in HH performance (positive and negative) and to help establishing adequate feedback to healthcare workers.

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Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't;

MeSH Terms

Medical Subject Headings::Diseases::Bacterial Infections and Mycoses::Infection
Medical Subject Headings::Anatomy::Body Regions::Extremities::Upper Extremity::Hand
Medical Subject Headings::Disciplines and Occupations::Social Sciences::Government::Federal Government::United States Government Agencies::United States Dept. of Health and Human Services::United States Public Health Service::Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
Medical Subject Headings::Disciplines and Occupations::Health Occupations::Medicine::Public Health::Epidemiology
Medical Subject Headings::Health Care::Environment and Public Health::Public Health::Public Health Practice::Communicable Disease Control::Infection Control
Medical Subject Headings::Health Care::Health Care Quality, Access, and Evaluation::Quality Assurance, Health Care::Credentialing::Accreditation::Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations
Medical Subject Headings::Disciplines and Occupations::Health Occupations::Nursing

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Keywords

Infecciones, Mano, epidemiología, Control de Infecciones, Enfermería

Citation

Mestre G, Berbel C, Tortajada P, Alarcia M, Coca R, Gallemi G, et al. "The 3/3 strategy": a successful multifaceted hospital wide hand hygiene intervention based on WHO and continuous quality improvement methodology. 2012 PLoS ONE; 7(10):e47200