Gel and a Poster: A Hand Hygiene Campaign Gets Tested in Two Outpatient Clinics

By Sylvia Foley, AJN senior editor

hand.sochacki.98193355_eb8473c967 Hand by sochacki.info, via Flickr

The trouble with hands is that they get into everything, and rapidly move between mouths, noses, eyes, and other people’s hands.

So says David Owen in his recent New Yorker article “Hands Across America,” which describes the development of the first gel sanitizer—and of course it’s nothing nurses and other clinicians don’t already know, just as they know that the practice of hand hygiene is crucial to reducing health care–associated infection rates. Yet adherence to hand hygiene guidelines among health care workers remains low. Interventions to improve hand hygiene have been tested in hospitals with demonstrated success, but have seldom been evaluated in other settings. In this month’s CE–Original Research feature, authors Kate Stenske KuKanich and colleagues describe their evaluation of a hand hygiene campaign in an outpatient oncology clinic and an outpatient gastrointestinal (GI) clinic.

The intervention. At each clinic, the researchers observed health care workers for the frequency of hand hygiene (attempts versus opportunities). After compiling baseline data, they initiated an intervention, which consisted of introducing an alcohol-based gel sanitizer and an informational poster to each clinic. (The gel sanitizer was provided as an alternative to foam sanitizer and soap and water.) One week later, interventional data were collected for five nonconsecutive days. Afterwards the posters and gel sanitizers were removed, and one month later, follow-up data were collected. Lastly, three months after follow-up observations ended, workers at […]

2017-07-27T14:51:38-04:00March 11th, 2013|nursing research|1 Comment

AJN’s March Issue: CVD Prevention in Women, Hand Hygiene, Sexuality in Nursing Homes, More

AJN0313.Cover.Online.inddAJN’s March issue is now available on our Web site. Here’s a selection of what not to miss.

Recent surveys show that women continue to underestimate their true risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). This prompted the American Heart Association (AHA) to update its guidelines for preventing CVD in women. To make sure you’re up to date on the latest information, read “Update on Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Women.”

This article is open access and can earn you 2.3 continuing education (CE) credits. (The cover image to the right, a lithograph from 1830, is called A Map of the Open Country of a Woman’s Heart. For more about it, read this month’s “On the Cover.”)

Although hand hygiene is considered to be the most effective way of preventing health care–associated infections, not all health care workers adhere to the guidelines. The month’s original research article presents findings from an interventional study that showed how the introduction of gel sanitizer and informational posters improved hand hygiene at two outpatient clinics. This article is open access and can earn you 2.1 CE credits. A podcast with the author is available on our Web site, and we also feature a 1932 article on hand hygiene in our department, From the AJN Archives.

Although nurses may think of sexuality as more likely to preoccupy the young, our Sexually Speaking article, “Sexuality in Nursing Care Facilities,” points out that nursing home residents have the […]

Nurses Doing Primary Care, Hospital-Acquired Infections, Questionable Celebrity Advice, and Tort Reform

With a looming shortage of primary care doctors, 28 states are considering expanding the authority of nurse practitioners. These nurses with advanced degrees want the right to practice without a doctor’s watchful eye and to prescribe narcotics. And if they hold a doctorate, they want to be called “Doctor.”

That’s the start of an MSNBC story called “Doc Deficit? Nurses Role May Grow in 28 States.” Much of the article is about nurse practitioners (NPs)–and the different ways they are (or are not) allowed to practice in different states, as well as the ongoing efforts of physician groups to limit their practice (even as the health care overhaul increases the demand for primary care physicians and invests in nurse-managed clinics). We’ve posted on scope of practice issues here more than once—what’s your take as nurses, or patients?

HAIs persist. Also today, as described from a number of perspectives in a collection of articles on Kaiser Health News, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a report stating that the rate of hospital-acquired infections did not improve in 2009, despite ongoing attention to this issue in studies, IHI initiatives, nursing journals, and nearly everywhere else. What gives?

Does getting sick make you an expert? Elsewhere, at Covering Health (the blog of the Association of Health Care Journalists), Andrew Van Dam is critical of tennis star Martina Navratilova’s public advocacy for yearly mammograms for women over 40.

In February, Martina […]

Go to Top