Measuring hand hygiene compliance rates at hospital entrances

By Deisy Morselli Gysi in paper bioinformatics statistics epidemiology

October 1, 2015

Abstract

Despite the importance of hand hygiene in the health care setting, there are no studies evaluating hand hygiene compliance at hospital entrances. The study was prospectively performed over a 33-week period from March 30, 2014-November 15, 2014, to evaluate hand hygiene compliance in 2 hospital reception areas. We compared electronic handwash counters with the application of radiofrequency identification (GOJO SMARTLINK) (electronic observer) that counts each activation of alcohol gel dispensers to direct observation (human observer) via remote review of video surveillance.

Citation

Vaidotas, M., Yokota, P. K. O., Marra, A. R., Camargo, T. Z. S., da Silva Victor, E., Gysi, D. M., … & Edmond, M. B. (2015). Measuring hand hygiene compliance rates at hospital entrances. American journal of infection control, 43(7), 694-696.

Posted on:
October 1, 2015
Length:
1 minute read, 124 words
Categories:
paper bioinformatics statistics epidemiology
See Also: