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Hygiene
No Quick Fix for Dirty Hands in Hospitals: British Study
Hand
washing is something most people learned about as children, but a British study
finds that health workers are not faithful about washing their hands and only
a few strategies to improve hygiene have worked. Infections spread by health
workers are a major cause of illness and death, and simple hand washing is shown
to be one of the best ways to prevent it. In Britain, 10 per cent of patients
develop healthcare-associated infections, which kill 5,000 people each year
at a cost of $1.86 billion a year, the researchers said. In the US health workers'
dirty hands infect about five per cent of patients at a cost of $4.5 billion
a year. A team of researchers led by Dr Dinah Gould from the School of Nursing
and Midwifery at City University, London, performed a systematic review to determine
whether strategies to improve hand hygiene are effective. The researchers, whose
study was published in this week's Cochrane Library Newsletter, found only two
trials that were even worth consideration and both were of poor quality. Based
on those, they concluded that a single teaching session or seminar was not likely
to affect hand washing behaviour, even in the short term. "We desperately
need some good research that will begin to show which interventions can bring
about change in people's behavior," Gould said in a statement. In addition
to preventing unnecessary spread of disease, good hand hygiene is highly desirable
on aesthetic grounds alone," she said. "It forms an important indicator
of the quality of health care and should continue to be promoted in all clinical
settings," she added.
Reuters Health
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