Good to Great: Quality-Improvement Initiative Increases and Sustains Pediatric Health Care Worker Hand Hygiene Compliance.
Abstract
The Joint Commission, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the World
Health Organization challenge hospitals to achieve and sustain compliance with effective
hand hygiene (HH) practice; however, many inpatient units fail to achieve a high level
of reliability. The aim of the project was to increase and sustain health care worker
(HCW) compliance with HH protocols from 87% (level of reliability [LOR] 1) to ≥95%
(LOR 2) within 9 months on 2 pediatric inpatient units in an academic children's hospital.This
study was a time-series, quality-improvement project. Interventions were tested through
multiple plan-do-study-act cycles on 2 pediatric inpatient units. HH compliance audits
of HCWs on these units were performed randomly each week by the hospital infection
prevention program. Control charts of percentages of HCW HH compliance were constructed
with 3-σ (data within 3 SDs from a mean) control limits. These control limits were
adjusted after achieving significant improvements in performance over time. Charts
were annotated with interventions including (1) increasing awareness, (2) providing
timely feedback, (3) empowering patients and families to participate in mitigation,
(4) providing focused education, and (5) developing interdisciplinary HH champions.HH
compliance rates improved from an average of 87% (LOR 1) to ≥95% (LOR 2) within 9
months, and this improvement has been sustained for >2 years on both pediatric inpatient
units.Significant and sustained gains in HH compliance rates of ≥95% (LOR 2) can be
achieved by applying high-reliability human-factor interventions.
Type
Journal articleSubject
HumansProgram Evaluation
Leadership
Infection Control
Feedback
Health Personnel
Hospitals, Pediatric
North Carolina
Quality Improvement
Hand Hygiene
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20341Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1542/hpeds.2016-0110Publication Info
McLean, Heather S; Carriker, Charlene; & Bordley, William Clay (2017). Good to Great: Quality-Improvement Initiative Increases and Sustains Pediatric Health
Care Worker Hand Hygiene Compliance. Hospital pediatrics, 7(4). pp. 189-196. 10.1542/hpeds.2016-0110. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20341.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
William Clayton Bordley
Professor of Pediatrics
Dr. Bordley is an accomplished clinician educator and researcher. His clinical expertise
is in pediatric emergency medicine and pediatric hospital medicine. He created and
served as the Division Chief of Pediatric Emergency Medicine until 2021. Prior to
this he organized and directed Duke's Pediatric Hospitalist program and Duke's Children's
Procedural Sedation Unit. Academically his interests are focused on quality improvement,
procedural sedation and bronchiolitis.
Heather Seabury McLean
Professor of Pediatrics
My interests include quality improvement and patient safety, patient-family centered
care, pediatric hospital medicine, and graduate and undergraduate medical education.
Through system change, I aim to improve the quality, value and safety of care of
our patients at Duke Health.
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