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This interim report provides a systematic review on the effectiveness of handwashing in hospital settings for preventing nosocomial infections. The review analyzes study designs, outcomes, and variations in results. The report also highlights the need for further research on other outcomes such as absenteeism and length of hospital stay, and the importance of ethical considerations in study design.
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Systematic Review on the Effectiveness of Handwashing-interim report- Hiroshi Ikai Stephanie Smith Allison McGeer Department of Infection Control, Mount Sinai Hospital
Background (1) • Hand hygiene is historically one of the most simple yet effective component of infection control activity. • Guideline for hand hygiene was published in 2002 by HICPAC/SHEA/APIC/IDSA, where the efficacy of hand hygiene is discussed as removal of microorganisms from hand.
Background (2) • Clinical effectiveness of hand hygiene for the prevention of nosocomial infections (NI) varies in quantity (effect size) and quality (study design) among studies.
Objective • To quantify the preventable portion of nosocomial infections by the implementation / reinforcement of handwashing in hospital settings -And its variation across different categories of infection (2) To quantify the impact of handwashing to the society and the health economy -through the systemic review of previous studies
Methods(1): data source • Systematic database search • Data source • MEDLINE • EMBASE • Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews • CINAHL • Secondary citations from • above articles • Textbook (Mandell, Mayhall) • Guidelines (WHO/SHEA/HICPAC)
Handwashing Handwashing [MeSH] hand was* hand hygiene hand scrub* hand clean* Nosocomial infections Cross infection [MeSH] bloodstream infection surgical site infection urinary tract infection gastrointestinal tract infection CNS infection / meningitis vertical/horizontal transmission Methods (2): Search Terms Absenteeism absenteeism [MeSH] sick leave leave of absence absen* AND work Length of Hospitalization length of: stay/hospitalization/admission time until discharge hospital days Health economics Economics, Medical [MeSH] Health Care Costs [MeSH] Cost of Illness [MeSH] burden of illness economic loss
Methods (3): Title / abstracts review • Titles and abstracts are reviewed by at least two people • Inclusion criteria: • Comparative studies before and after handwashing program OR reviews that may mention about such studies • Hospital setting • Either retrospective or prospective design • Peer reviewed journals • Exclusion criteria: • Article type • Short (1-3 pages) review with no original data • Editorials • Single case reports
Methods (4): Data collection • Two independent reviewers extract data on: • Study design • Before-after / Cohort study / etc. • Patient population • Adults / pediatrics / post-surgical • Care setting • Ward / ICU / NICU • Target caregivers • Physician / nurse / all HCWs +/- visitor / family • Type / content of handwashing program • Education program / monitoring / overall process improvements • Outcomes • Improvement of adherence to hand hygiene practice • Incidence / absenteeism / economics / length of stay
Summary • Most of current data on the effectiveness of hand hygiene are based on before-after studies. • Most studies show effectiveness of hand hygiene for prevention of nosocomial infections. • Effect size are variable, with relative risk ranging from 14% to 94%.
Next step • Systematic review should also be completed for other outcomes, i.e. absenteeism, length of hospital stay, and health economics. • There may be a guideline for reporting observational studies in infection control, so that each data can contribute to future policy making. • Controlled study design maybe preferred in the future, if ethically appropriate.