Author: Huang, Fanyu; Armando, Marjorie; Dufau, Stéphane; Florea, Oleg; Brouqui, Philippe; Boudjema, Sophia
Title: Covid-19 outbreak and health care worker behavioral change toward hand hygiene practices Cord-id: u8r70jgs Document date: 2021_3_11
ID: u8r70jgs
Snippet: BACKGROUND: The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has affected healthcare workers (HCW) in their clinical practice. HCW were challenged with new guidelines and practices to protect themselves from occupational risks. We wished to observe if hand hygiene behavior by real-time measurement was related to the dynamic of the epidemic, and the type of patient being cared for in France. METHODS: This study used an automated hand hygiene recording system to measure HCW hand hygiene on entry to and
Document: BACKGROUND: The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has affected healthcare workers (HCW) in their clinical practice. HCW were challenged with new guidelines and practices to protect themselves from occupational risks. We wished to observe if hand hygiene behavior by real-time measurement was related to the dynamic of the epidemic, and the type of patient being cared for in France. METHODS: This study used an automated hand hygiene recording system to measure HCW hand hygiene on entry to and exit from patient rooms throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. We analyzed the correlation between hand hygiene compliance and COVID-19 epidemiological data. Analysis of variance was performed to compare compliance rate during the different periods of the epidemic. FINDINGS: HCW hand hygiene rate on room entry decreased over time; on room exit, it increased by 13.73% during the first wave of COVID-19, decreased by 9.87% during the post-lockdown period, then rebounded by 2.82% during the second wave of the epidemic. Hand hygiene during patient care and hand hygiene on room exit had a positive relationship with the local COVID-19 epidemic; conversely, hand hygiene on room entry did not depend on the trend of the epidemic, nor on nursing of COVID-19 patients, and it decreased over time. CONCLUSION: HCW modified their behaviors to face the risk propensity of the pandemic. However, to improve the poor compliance at room entry, reducing confusion between the hand hygiene recommendation and glove recommendation may be necessary; disinfection of gloving hands might solve this issue.
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