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Why is mock care not a good proxy for predicting hand contamination during patient care?

King, M.F.; Wilson, A.M.; L�pez-Garc�a, M.; Proctor, J.; Peckham, D.G.; Clifton, I.J.; Dancer, S.J.; Noakes, C.J.

Authors

M.F. King

A.M. Wilson

M. L�pez-Garc�a

J. Proctor

D.G. Peckham

I.J. Clifton

C.J. Noakes



Abstract

Healthcare worker (HCW) behaviours, such as the sequence of their contacts with surfaces and hand hygiene moments, are important for understanding disease transmission.
Aim
To propose a method for recording sequences of HCW behaviours during mock vs actual procedures, and to evaluate differences for use in infection risk modelling and staff training.
Methods
Procedures for three types of care were observed under mock and actual settings: intravenous (IV) drip care, observational care and doctors' rounds on a respiratory ward in a university teaching hospital. Contacts and hand hygiene behaviours were recorded in real-time using either a handheld tablet or video cameras.
Findings
Actual patient care demonstrated 70% more surface contacts than mock care. It was also 2.4 min longer than mock care, but equal in terms of patient contacts. On average, doctors' rounds took 7.5 min (2.5 min for mock care), whilst auxiliary nurses took 4.9 min for observational care (2.4 min for mock care). Registered nurses took 3.2 min for mock IV care and 3.8 min for actual IV care; this translated into a 44% increase in contacts. In 51% of actual care episodes and 37% of mock care episodes, hand hygiene was performed before patient contact; in comparison, 15% of staff delivering actual care performed hand hygiene after patient contact on leaving the room vs 22% for mock care. The number of overall touches in the patient room was a modest predictor of hand hygiene. Using a model to predict hand contamination from surface contacts for Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli and norovirus, mock care underestimated micro-organisms on hands by approximately 30%.

Citation

King, M., Wilson, A., López-García, M., Proctor, J., Peckham, D., Clifton, I., Dancer, S., & Noakes, C. (2021). Why is mock care not a good proxy for predicting hand contamination during patient care?. Journal of Hospital Infection, 109, 44-51. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhin.2020.11.016

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 19, 2020
Online Publication Date Nov 30, 2020
Publication Date 2021-03
Deposit Date Mar 26, 2021
Publicly Available Date Mar 26, 2021
Journal Journal of Hospital Infection
Print ISSN 0195-6701
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 109
Pages 44-51
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhin.2020.11.016
Keywords Fomite transmission, Patient care, Surface contacts, Infection risk, Staphylococcus aureus
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2755975

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