Cost-effectiveness of a team and leaders-directed strategy to improve nurses’ adherence to hand hygiene guidelines: A cluster randomised trial
Cost-effectiveness of a team and leaders-directed strategy to improve nurses’ adherence to hand hygiene guidelines: A cluster randomised trial
Background: Many strategies have been designed and evaluated to address poor handhygiene compliance. Unfortunately, well-designed economic evaluations of hand hygiene improvement strategies are lacking.
Objective: To compare the cost-effectiveness of two successful implementation strategies for improving nurses’ hand hygiene compliance and reducing hospital acquired infections (HAI’s).
Design and setting: A cost-effectiveness analysis alongside a cluster randomised controlled trial was conducted in 67 nursing wards of three hospitals in the Netherlands. The evaluation used a hospital perspective.
Participants: All affiliated nurses of the nursing wards. Wards were randomly assigned to either the control group (n = 30) or the experimental group (n = 37).
Methods: The control group received a state-of-the-art strategy including education,reminders feedback and optimising materials and facilities. The experimental group received a team and leaders-directed strategy which included all elements of the state-of-the-art strategy supplemented with interventions aimed at the social context of teams and enhancing leadership. The most efficient implementation strategy was determined by the incremental costeffectiveness ratio per extra percentage of hand hygiene compliance gained and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio per additional percentage reduction in the HAI rate.
Bootstrap methods were used to determine confidence intervals for these incremental cost-effectiveness ratio’s. Two scenarios of 15 and 30% were used to express the association between increased hand hygiene compliance and the reduction in HAIs.
Results: The team and leaders-directed strategy was significantly more effective in improving hand hygiene compliance. The mean difference effect was 8.91% (95% CI, 0.75–17.06). This extra increase was achieved at an average cost of s5497 per ward. The incremental cost per extra percentage of hand hygiene gained on ward level was s622. The incremental cost per additional percentage reduction in the HAI rate on ward level was s2074 (30% scenario) and s4125 (15% scenario). Within the 30% scenario, there is a probability of 90% that the team and leaders-directed strategy is cost-effective and withinthe 15% scenario, there is a probability of 70% that the team and leaders-directed strategy is cost-effective.
Conclusions: Optimising hand hygiene compliance through a team and leaders-directed strategy is cost-effective as compared to a state-of-the-art strategy.
cost-effectiveness, randomised controlled trial, infection control, hand washing implementation, quality improvement
518-526
Huis, Anita
cceacfe4-1e7c-46ce-94d4-ca778ad9f644
Hulscher, Marlies
cbd15b6a-6e4d-4831-9c8a-3df23fd53fba
Adang, Eddy
635fd5d4-2df6-4306-b6b3-9e736ef40253
Grol, Richard
7079ec99-ac2b-4d24-9ddd-513e32814c04
van Achterberg, Theo
eb49404e-62c6-427d-bb94-580254177a30
Schoonhoven, Lisette
46a2705b-c657-409b-b9da-329d5b1b02de
April 2013
Huis, Anita
cceacfe4-1e7c-46ce-94d4-ca778ad9f644
Hulscher, Marlies
cbd15b6a-6e4d-4831-9c8a-3df23fd53fba
Adang, Eddy
635fd5d4-2df6-4306-b6b3-9e736ef40253
Grol, Richard
7079ec99-ac2b-4d24-9ddd-513e32814c04
van Achterberg, Theo
eb49404e-62c6-427d-bb94-580254177a30
Schoonhoven, Lisette
46a2705b-c657-409b-b9da-329d5b1b02de
Huis, Anita, Hulscher, Marlies, Adang, Eddy, Grol, Richard, van Achterberg, Theo and Schoonhoven, Lisette
(2013)
Cost-effectiveness of a team and leaders-directed strategy to improve nurses’ adherence to hand hygiene guidelines: A cluster randomised trial.
International Journal of Nursing Studies, 50 (4), .
(doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2012.11.016).
(PMID:23245456)
Abstract
Background: Many strategies have been designed and evaluated to address poor handhygiene compliance. Unfortunately, well-designed economic evaluations of hand hygiene improvement strategies are lacking.
Objective: To compare the cost-effectiveness of two successful implementation strategies for improving nurses’ hand hygiene compliance and reducing hospital acquired infections (HAI’s).
Design and setting: A cost-effectiveness analysis alongside a cluster randomised controlled trial was conducted in 67 nursing wards of three hospitals in the Netherlands. The evaluation used a hospital perspective.
Participants: All affiliated nurses of the nursing wards. Wards were randomly assigned to either the control group (n = 30) or the experimental group (n = 37).
Methods: The control group received a state-of-the-art strategy including education,reminders feedback and optimising materials and facilities. The experimental group received a team and leaders-directed strategy which included all elements of the state-of-the-art strategy supplemented with interventions aimed at the social context of teams and enhancing leadership. The most efficient implementation strategy was determined by the incremental costeffectiveness ratio per extra percentage of hand hygiene compliance gained and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio per additional percentage reduction in the HAI rate.
Bootstrap methods were used to determine confidence intervals for these incremental cost-effectiveness ratio’s. Two scenarios of 15 and 30% were used to express the association between increased hand hygiene compliance and the reduction in HAIs.
Results: The team and leaders-directed strategy was significantly more effective in improving hand hygiene compliance. The mean difference effect was 8.91% (95% CI, 0.75–17.06). This extra increase was achieved at an average cost of s5497 per ward. The incremental cost per extra percentage of hand hygiene gained on ward level was s622. The incremental cost per additional percentage reduction in the HAI rate on ward level was s2074 (30% scenario) and s4125 (15% scenario). Within the 30% scenario, there is a probability of 90% that the team and leaders-directed strategy is cost-effective and withinthe 15% scenario, there is a probability of 70% that the team and leaders-directed strategy is cost-effective.
Conclusions: Optimising hand hygiene compliance through a team and leaders-directed strategy is cost-effective as compared to a state-of-the-art strategy.
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Published date: April 2013
Keywords:
cost-effectiveness, randomised controlled trial, infection control, hand washing implementation, quality improvement
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 351714
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/351714
ISSN: 0020-7489
PURE UUID: 31f7dbc3-7ce5-411b-b298-6b6695ccf342
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Date deposited: 25 Apr 2013 14:52
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:41
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Contributors
Author:
Anita Huis
Author:
Marlies Hulscher
Author:
Eddy Adang
Author:
Richard Grol
Author:
Theo van Achterberg
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