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Features of educational interventions that lead to compliance with hand hygiene in healthcare professionals within a hospital care setting. A BEME systematic review: BEME Guide No. 22.

Features of educational interventions that lead to compliance with hand hygiene in healthcare professionals within a hospital care setting. A BEME systematic review: BEME Guide No. 22.
Features of educational interventions that lead to compliance with hand hygiene in healthcare professionals within a hospital care setting. A BEME systematic review: BEME Guide No. 22.
Background: in the United Kingdom, there are approximately 300,000 healthcare-associated infections (HCAI) annually, costing an estimated £1 billion. Up to 30% of all HCAI are potentially preventable by better application of knowledge and adherence to infection prevention procedures. Implementation of Department of Health guidelines through educational interventions has resulted in significant and sustained improvements in hand hygiene compliance and reductions in HCAI.

Aim: to determine the features of structured educational interventions that impact on compliance with hand hygiene in healthcare professionals within a hospital care setting.

Methods: Sixteen electronic databases were searched. Outcomes were assessed using Kirkpatrick's hierarchy and included changes in hand hygiene compliance of healthcare professionals, in service delivery and in the clinical welfare of patients involved.

Results: a total of 8845 articles were reviewed, of which 30 articles met the inclusion criteria. Delivery of education was separated into six groups.

Conclusions: it was not possible to identify individual features of educational interventions due to each study reporting multicomponent interventions. However, multiple, continuous interventions were better than single interventions in terms of eliciting and sustaining behaviour change. Data were not available to determine the time, nature and type of booster sessions with feedback needed for a permanent change in compliance.
0142-159X
e406-e420
Cherry, Mary Gemma
08518eeb-0e79-4b7f-97fa-a4ca8bb53e61
Brown, Jeremy M.
66bbc9cc-5195-4930-ab8d-a6699eef6da9
Bethell, George S.
c7a62cc1-5573-41f6-ae00-3c11e8219dd4
Neal, Tim
c0265e09-485f-466d-b889-1825c0473a5e
Shaw, Nigel J.
d8d8f314-162d-4a17-bcb9-721a9ba74384
Cherry, Mary Gemma
08518eeb-0e79-4b7f-97fa-a4ca8bb53e61
Brown, Jeremy M.
66bbc9cc-5195-4930-ab8d-a6699eef6da9
Bethell, George S.
c7a62cc1-5573-41f6-ae00-3c11e8219dd4
Neal, Tim
c0265e09-485f-466d-b889-1825c0473a5e
Shaw, Nigel J.
d8d8f314-162d-4a17-bcb9-721a9ba74384

Cherry, Mary Gemma, Brown, Jeremy M., Bethell, George S., Neal, Tim and Shaw, Nigel J. (2012) Features of educational interventions that lead to compliance with hand hygiene in healthcare professionals within a hospital care setting. A BEME systematic review: BEME Guide No. 22. Medical Teacher, 34 (6), e406-e420. (doi:10.3109/0142159X.2012.680936).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: in the United Kingdom, there are approximately 300,000 healthcare-associated infections (HCAI) annually, costing an estimated £1 billion. Up to 30% of all HCAI are potentially preventable by better application of knowledge and adherence to infection prevention procedures. Implementation of Department of Health guidelines through educational interventions has resulted in significant and sustained improvements in hand hygiene compliance and reductions in HCAI.

Aim: to determine the features of structured educational interventions that impact on compliance with hand hygiene in healthcare professionals within a hospital care setting.

Methods: Sixteen electronic databases were searched. Outcomes were assessed using Kirkpatrick's hierarchy and included changes in hand hygiene compliance of healthcare professionals, in service delivery and in the clinical welfare of patients involved.

Results: a total of 8845 articles were reviewed, of which 30 articles met the inclusion criteria. Delivery of education was separated into six groups.

Conclusions: it was not possible to identify individual features of educational interventions due to each study reporting multicomponent interventions. However, multiple, continuous interventions were better than single interventions in terms of eliciting and sustaining behaviour change. Data were not available to determine the time, nature and type of booster sessions with feedback needed for a permanent change in compliance.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 11 May 2012

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499806
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499806
ISSN: 0142-159X
PURE UUID: 433f25ad-6f6b-4f4e-9cdd-036c24d2f368
ORCID for George S. Bethell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1302-0735

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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2025 16:54
Last modified: 05 Apr 2025 02:08

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Contributors

Author: Mary Gemma Cherry
Author: Jeremy M. Brown
Author: George S. Bethell ORCID iD
Author: Tim Neal
Author: Nigel J. Shaw

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