Study: Hand hygiene low among paramedics
Thursday, 31 January, 2019
Paramedics appear to be more concerned with protecting themselves than reducing their patients鈥 risk of infection, according to a .
The study observed聽ambulance staff practice in four countries, including Australia, and found that paramedic聽compliance with hand hygiene standards appears to be 鈥渞emarkably low鈥.
The study, published in the , assessed how paramedics in four countries聽complied with recommended hand and basic hygiene standards, including the use of gloves, to protect themselves and their patients from the risk of infection.
The study assessed compliance with World Health Organization guidelines on the five triggers for hand hygiene using either antiseptic rub or soap and water.聽These triggers were:
- Before touching the patient.
- Before any 鈥榗lean鈥 procedure, such as an injection or cleaning a wound.
- After contact with bodily fluids/wounds.
- After touching the patient.
- After handling the patient鈥檚 belongings or anything in the immediate vicinity, such as the stretcher harness.
In all, 240 hours of observation were clocked up between December 2016 and May 2017 in Finland, Sweden, Denmark and Australia, during which time 77 paramedics dealt with 87 patients.
Researchers found that while compliance with basic hygiene standards was high (short, clean nails (83%), hair short or tied back (99%) and no jewellery worn (62%)), compliance with hand hygiene was poor.聽In all, 1344 hand hygiene triggers were recorded during this period, but complied with in only 15%聽of instances.
When broken down separately by trigger, compliance was just 3%聽before touching a patient and 2%聽before any 鈥榗lean鈥 procedure. This rose to 8%聽after contact with bodily fluids, 29%聽after touching the patient and 38%聽after touching belongings, etc.
Compliance rate varied substantially among the four countries, with paramedics in Denmark topping the league table.
Paramedics used gloves in just over half (54%; 720) of the recommended instances, with new gloves worn before touching patients around half the time (48%), but in only 14%聽of 鈥榗lean鈥 procedures.
And there was a tendency to wear the same pair of gloves throughout different indications 鈥 for example, after touching a contaminated site and touching the patient for the first time (21%) or before a 鈥榗lean鈥 procedure (64%).
Gloves were also worn when there was no obvious need 鈥 no risk of bodily fluids, for example. And hand hygiene was less likely when gloves were worn.
Proper hand hygiene was observed in 2% of such instances, and in nearly a third of the indications (30%) when no gloves were worn, suggesting an over-reliance on gloves to ward off the risk of infection, said the researchers.
鈥淗and hygiene compliance among [emergency medical service] providers was remarkably low and higher after patient encounters compared with before patient encounters,鈥 they wrote. 鈥淚n addition, there was an over-reliance on gloves, indicating a tendency towards self-protection instead of patient protection.鈥
They added: 鈥淚t is important to note that [hand hygiene] is about preventing the spread of microbes and thus protecting the patient. Whereas the use of gloves primarily is about protecting oneself from bodily fluids, and so on.鈥
This is an observational study, and it is very likely that behaviours might have been influenced by the presence of the observers, said the researchers. As such, no firm conclusions can be drawn about the findings.
Nevertheless, their findings indicate that further research is warranted on the barriers to good hand hygiene and how healthcare providers understand its value.
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