Comarow On Quality

Cleaner Hands, Fewer Infections? Maybe Not

By Avery Comarow

Posted: January 23, 2008

Corrected on 1/24/08: An earlier version of this blog misspelled Mark Rupp's name.

If only those doctors and nurses would wash their hands...

Hand washing is one of those perpetual skeletons in medicine's closet. Infections acquired in U.S. hospitals kill an estimated 100,000 patients annually—yet only about 40 percent of doctors, nurses, and other hospital caregivers clean their hands before touching patients. It's not as if hospitals aren't trying. Posters are displayed. Briefings are conducted. Dispensers of germicidal hand gels have sprouted on walls outside (often inside) patient rooms so caregivers don't have to scrub at a sink (to be rewarded at the end of the day with chapped hands). Don't they get it? That clean hands would lower the rate of infection and lead to fewer deaths?

Or so it would seem—but not according to a two-year investigation at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. A study in the January issue of Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology found that even after doctors, nurses, and other caregivers in two of the hospital's intensive-care units almost doubled their use of hand sanitizers, from about 38 percent to nearly 70 percent, infection rates didn't budge.

"There's a cautionary tale here," Mark Rupp, lead researcher and professor of infectious diseases at the medical center, told me. "Everybody takes a very simplistic view of the infection-control problem in our hospitals. It's like, gosh, all you have to do is wash your hands, and the infection problem will go away. But there's more to infection control than hand washing." Rupp was among those surprised. "I thought we would find some sort of signal in the direction of improvement," he said.

Among the possible reasons for the study's findings, said Rupp, is that the hospital's infection incidence was low at the start of the study, so no one factor could move the number dramatically. Another is that 80 or 90 percent compliance might be necessary to keep bacteria from being transmitted. Hand washing, he concludes, is only part of the equation—one element in a package that wraps in other elements, such as meticulous care of IVs and urinary catheters and thorough room cleaning.

Washing hands

Either you as a consumer patient or an advocate in your room..require everyone to wash their hands thoroughly 15 secs plus.A Study has shown that doctors when not being watched will only wash their hands 44% of the time, and if they knew they were being watched 61% of the time did they wash up..this is still way too low.

A wonderful new book for us consumer patients is worth getting to note all the practical tips to help you survive the healthcare system. Navigating the Healthcare Maze-Jeff Knott..certainly emphasises that we have to take back the empowerment of our care.

Infection of patients every year kills upwards of 100,000 people a year..handwashing might prevent some of those deaths by more handwashing. Amazing!!

Charles William of FL @ Sep 03, 2008 08:14:26 AM

Dear Editor,

Your article pertaining to hand washing and reducing infections makes a good point. Even the most effective intervention of hand hygiene cannot solve the problem of healthcare associated infections. However, I agree that it is one of the most important means of preventing the spread of infections. As a nurses aid I have been taught that there is a proper technique to hand washing. I t must be done with soap, water and friction using a scrubbing motion for at least 20 seconds. I believe that hospitals and care facilities are becoming too lax in the correct procedure and too dependent on simply using hand sanitizers. From working as a health care provider I have seen that only a percentage of care givers are actually using the proper hand washing technique. All health providers need to make this a priority thus reducing the risk of infection and protecting people who come into and out of healthcare facilities. Professionals need to know their hospital and risk of infection in all areas such as emergency rooms, operating rooms, equipment, instruments, rest rooms, patients’ rooms and which areas are at high risk for infection.

Health providers need to work as a team to help prevent infections in their work areas. I believe that visitors need to be instructed not to visit if they are not well. Posted signs can create reminders of this and will remind staff and visitors about washing hands. People also need to be reminded to get their flu shots. Each person needs to be responsible to stop the spread of infections in day to day activities.

In closing I agree that the infection rate would not drop if facilities focused only on proper hand washing as there are just too many other areas that need to be considered. I believe this article will get the readers' attention on the importance of decreasing infection and realizing it is each health care provider and visitor's responsibility.

Katie

Katie of MN @ Mar 16, 2008 18:04:24 PM

Hospital-acquired infections

Well-used stethoscopes, bp cuffs, etc., have a role in this too. But one biggie that I've noticed in a couple of hospitals and several nursing homes is that there is no place to put bed linens, gowns, towels, washcloths, pillows, except in the visitor chairs, because the food tray (which isn't big enough anyway) usually holds other supplies. Even then, the pillows (which will get re-used with the same pillowcase if it is not bath/bed-changing time but just toilet hygiene) often fall to the floor. Plastic leathery chairs seems to be just as dirty as the fabric-covered filthy-looking chairs. Guess where else visitors' butts have sat before they visited; and take a stab at what is on the floor.

Also, the above-mentioned supplies, in anticipation of a later bath, are often stored on the floor of the patient's closet where shoes, dirty clothes, overnight bags and other stuff from previous patients have been. Viruses and germs survive longer than given credit.

Most rooms have space for a foldable pull-down table from a wall. Close it up when not in use.

Hand-washing is primary of course, but let's look at other obvious infectious sources.

J. Heatwole of MD @ Feb 15, 2008 03:24:47 AM

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Comarow On Quality

U.S. News's Avery Comarow has been editor of the America's Best Hospitals annual rankings since they first appeared in 1990. His reporting on clinical medicine, from the latest cholesterol guidelines to robotic surgery, has been driven by the question: What does this mean to patients? And that is the perspective he brings to his observations and commentaries on the increasing number of programs by hospitals and other healthcare providers to improve care and patient safety.

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