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Clean hands are caring hands: Improving anesthesia provider hand hygiene and double-glove compliance during induction of general anesthesia.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Regier, A-LF; Simmons, VC; Kempel, S; Reynolds, SS
Published in: American journal of infection control
January 2025

Hand hygiene and double-gloving practices during induction of general anesthesia can decrease transmission of bacteria to patients and subsequent health care-associated infections; however, compliance to these practices is low.A pre- and postimplementation quality improvement design was used with Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles. Several implementation strategies were used to improve hand hygiene and double-glove compliance among anesthesia providers, including printed educational materials, video, in-person, and virtual meetings, visual reminders, audit, and feedback, and improved access to hand sanitizer dispensers in the anesthesia workstation.Average hand hygiene compliance increased from 0% to 11.8% and double-gloving compliance increased from 18.5% to 34.5%. A decrease in surgical site infections was shown in the postimplementation period.Although hand hygiene and double-gloving practices increased after the initial implementation, the improvements were not sustained long-term. Practices to support sustainability, such as routine booster sessions, may be considered.Incorporating these quality improvement measures into practice may improve anesthesia provider hand hygiene compliance during induction of general anesthesia and impact subsequent infection rates.

Duke Scholars

Published In

American journal of infection control

DOI

EISSN

1527-3296

ISSN

0196-6553

Publication Date

January 2025

Volume

53

Issue

1

Start / End Page

53 / 57

Related Subject Headings

  • Quality Improvement
  • Infection Control
  • Humans
  • Hand Hygiene
  • Guideline Adherence
  • Gloves, Surgical
  • Epidemiology
  • Cross Infection
  • Anesthesia, General
  • 4206 Public health
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Regier, A.-L., Simmons, V. C., Kempel, S., & Reynolds, S. S. (2025). Clean hands are caring hands: Improving anesthesia provider hand hygiene and double-glove compliance during induction of general anesthesia. American Journal of Infection Control, 53(1), 53–57. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2024.09.010
Regier, Allie-Lane F., Virginia C. Simmons, Sarah Kempel, and Staci S. Reynolds. “Clean hands are caring hands: Improving anesthesia provider hand hygiene and double-glove compliance during induction of general anesthesia.American Journal of Infection Control 53, no. 1 (January 2025): 53–57. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2024.09.010.
Regier A-LF, Simmons VC, Kempel S, Reynolds SS. Clean hands are caring hands: Improving anesthesia provider hand hygiene and double-glove compliance during induction of general anesthesia. American journal of infection control. 2025 Jan;53(1):53–7.
Regier, Allie-Lane F., et al. “Clean hands are caring hands: Improving anesthesia provider hand hygiene and double-glove compliance during induction of general anesthesia.American Journal of Infection Control, vol. 53, no. 1, Jan. 2025, pp. 53–57. Epmc, doi:10.1016/j.ajic.2024.09.010.
Regier A-LF, Simmons VC, Kempel S, Reynolds SS. Clean hands are caring hands: Improving anesthesia provider hand hygiene and double-glove compliance during induction of general anesthesia. American journal of infection control. 2025 Jan;53(1):53–57.
Journal cover image

Published In

American journal of infection control

DOI

EISSN

1527-3296

ISSN

0196-6553

Publication Date

January 2025

Volume

53

Issue

1

Start / End Page

53 / 57

Related Subject Headings

  • Quality Improvement
  • Infection Control
  • Humans
  • Hand Hygiene
  • Guideline Adherence
  • Gloves, Surgical
  • Epidemiology
  • Cross Infection
  • Anesthesia, General
  • 4206 Public health