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Clinical Trial Summary

If patients acquire a new infection whilst in hospital this can cause significant morbidity, prolonged hospitalisation and even death. Indeed, there is much public concern about infections such as MRSA. Patients who require intensive care are probably at the greatest risk.

Appropriate hand hygiene by healthcare workers can reduce infection rates and is a key goal of many patient safety initiatives. Worldwide, hand hygiene compliance has been estimated at only 38.7% despite the intervention being simple and cheap. Reasons for poor compliance include lack of time, skin irritation, lack of facilities, intensity of workload and forgetfulness. Furthermore, since cross infection may not be apparent for some days, staff may not associate their (lack of) actions with having caused harm.

Measuring compliance levels enables staff to understand whether they could improve. Direct observation of staff is labour intensive and is not continuous or universal. We will monitor hand hygiene compliance with a newly developed electronic system (MedSense, General Sensing Inc.). We will use the data to provide feedback to the staff in several ways. We hypothesise that comprehensive personalised feedback will reduce healthcare associated infections. We will undertake the study in three intensive care units.


Clinical Trial Description

All patients admitted to three intensive care units will be monitored for healthcare associated infections. In parallel the units will be cluster randomised to implement the electronic compliance monitoring in three different ways:

- Unit level feed back every week of current compliance for each of three staff groupings (doctors, nurses, allied health professionals)

- Personalised feedback in the form of an email at the end of a shift stating an individuals performance relative to the average for their professional grouping.

- Real time feedback in the form of a badge worn by the healthcare worker that vibrates when the system thinks they have missed or are about to miss an opportunity for hand hygiene.

All healthcare workers will receive the level of feedback defined in the randomisation for the duration of the three intervention periods. The units will cross-over with an interventing two week wash out period.

All personal feedback will be confidential and private to the individual. ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Case-Crossover, Time Perspective: Prospective


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02511925
Study type Observational
Source Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 2013
Completion date July 2014

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