Good to Great: Quality-Improvement Initiative Increases and Sustains Pediatric Health Care Worker Hand Hygiene Compliance.

dc.contributor.author

McLean, Heather S

dc.contributor.author

Carriker, Charlene

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Bordley, William Clay

dc.date.accessioned

2020-04-01T15:05:38Z

dc.date.available

2020-04-01T15:05:38Z

dc.date.issued

2017-04

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2020-04-01T15:05:35Z

dc.description.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.

dc.identifier

hpeds.2016-0110

dc.identifier.issn

2154-1663

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2154-1671

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20341

dc.language

eng

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American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

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Hospital pediatrics

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10.1542/hpeds.2016-0110

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Humans

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Program Evaluation

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Leadership

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Infection Control

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Feedback

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Health Personnel

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Hospitals, Pediatric

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North Carolina

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Quality Improvement

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Hand Hygiene

dc.title

Good to Great: Quality-Improvement Initiative Increases and Sustains Pediatric Health Care Worker Hand Hygiene Compliance.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

McLean, Heather S|0000-0003-4901-8298

duke.contributor.orcid

Bordley, William Clay|0000-0003-0854-059X

pubs.begin-page

189

pubs.end-page

196

pubs.issue

4

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School of Medicine

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Surgery, Emergency Medicine

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Duke

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Surgery

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

7

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