Forum for Science, Industry and Business
  • Sponsored by:
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Health and Medicine Content

Gel-based handrub improves hospital hygiene

next article
03.05.2007

Giving health care workers easy access to alcohol-based handrubs can improve hygiene in hospitals, a study published today in the open access journal Critical Care suggests.

 

Good hand hygiene among health care workers can help minimise the spread of infections within hospitals. Alcohol-based handrubs are the standard method of hand hygiene worldwide, yet compliance amongst hospital staff remains low.


One of the best ways to boost compliance is to give workers bottles of handrub to keep in their pockets, report Prof Didier Pittet and colleagues from the University of Geneva Hospitals, Switzerland, who monitored the hand hygiene of 102 health care workers based in the same intensive care unit. Using a gel, rather than liquid-based product also made hand hygiene more acceptable and was reported to improve the skin condition of workers’ hands.

The workers were first given access to a liquid-based handrub, which was then switched a few months later to a gel-based formulation of the same product. An independent observer recorded opportunities for hand hygiene and actual hand cleansing.

Overall compliance was low, with nurses most likely to follow hand hygiene recommendations compared to doctors. When the gel was introduced, compliance increased from 32% to 41%. But making the handrub immediately available generated the biggest increase in compliance – a jump of 15%.

Some hand hygiene measures have previously been found to cause skin irritation and more than half the health care workers in the study reported they preferred the gel to the liquid-based product, indicating that it improved the condition of their skin. No cases of significant skin damage occurred with either formulation of the handrub. Alongside availability, improved skin tolerance is an important factor in trying to persuade health care workers to take the necessary steps to improve hand hygiene.

Press Officer | Source: alphagalileo
Further information: ccforum.com/
www.biomedcentral.com

next article

More articles from Health and Medicine:

nachricht Does hormone treatment predispose patients to breast cancer?
21.11.2008 | CNRS (Délégation Paris Michel-Ange)

nachricht Mechanisms of cardiovascular disease and cancer give clues to new therapies
21.11.2008 | European Science Foundation

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

Sustainable garden roofs developed as a new construction material

21.11.2008 | Studies and Analyses

Bees declared the winners in Earthwatch’s ‘irreplaceable species’ battle

21.11.2008 | Ecology, The Environment and Conservation

Hairspray is linked to common genital birth defect

21.11.2008 | Studies and Analyses

Event News

The Automobile – The Transition from Energy Guzzler to Power Supplier

20.11.2008 | Event News

Ministers meet to define the role of space in delivering global objectives

18.11.2008 | Event News

156th Annual Acoustical Society of America (ASA) Meeting in Miami

28.10.2008 | Event News