scholarly journals Healthcare Worker Perceptions of Germs and Personal Hygiene Routines in a Ventilator-Capable Skilled Nursing Facility (vSNF)

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s245-s246
Author(s):  
Katharina Rynkiewich ◽  
Jinal Makhija ◽  
Mary Carl Froilan ◽  
Ellen Benson ◽  
Alice Han ◽  
...  

Background: During a 2017–2019 intervention in Chicago-area vSNFs to control carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, healthcare worker adherence to hand hygiene and personal protective equipment was stubbornly inadequate (hand hygiene adherence, ~16% and 56% on entry and exit), despite educational and monitoring efforts. Little is known about vSNF staff understanding of multidrug-resistant organism (MDRO) transmission. We conducted a qualitative analysis of staff members at a vSNF that included assessment of staff perceptions of personal MDRO acquisition risk and associated personal hygiene routines transitioning from work to home. Methods: Between September 2018 and November 2018, a PhD-candidate medical anthropologist conducted semistructured interviews with management (N = 5), nursing staff (N = 6), and certified nursing assistants (N = 6) at a vSNF in the Chicago region (Illinois) who had already received 1 year of MDRO staff education and hand hygiene adherence monitoring. More than 11 hours of semistructured interviews were collected and transcribed. Data collection and analysis included identifying how staff members related to their own risk of MDRO acquisition/infection and what personal hygiene routines they followed. Transcriptions of the data were analyzed using thematic coding aided by MAXQDA qualitative analysis software. Results: Staff members at all levels were able to describe their perceptions related to the risk of acquiring an MDRO and personal hygiene in great detail. The risk of acquiring an MDRO was perceived as a constant threat by staff members, who described germs as bad and everywhere (Table 1). The perceived threat of MDRO acquisition was connected to individual personal hygiene routines (eg, changing shoes before leaving work), which were considered important by staff members (Table 2). Nursing staff and certified nursing assistants noted that personal hygiene was a critical factor keeping their residents, themselves, and their families free from MDROs. Conclusions: In the context of a quality improvement campaign, vSNF healthcare workers are aware of the transmissibility of microscopic MDROs and are highly motivated in preventing transmission of MDROs to themselves. Such perceptions may explain actions such as why workers may be differentially adherent with infection control interventions (eg, more likely to perform hand hygiene leaving a room rather than going into a room, or less likely to change gowns in between residents in multibed rooms if they believe they are already personally protected with a gown). Our findings suggest that interventions to improve staff adherence to infection control measures may need to address other factors related to adherence besides knowledge deficit (eg, understaffing) and may need to acknowledge self-protection as a driving motivator for staff adherence.Funding: NoneDisclosures: None

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s244-s245
Author(s):  
Katharina Rynkiewich ◽  
Jinal Makhija ◽  
Mary Carl Froilan ◽  
Ellen Benson ◽  
Alice Han ◽  
...  

Background: During 2017–2019 in the Chicago region, several ventilator-capable skilled nursing facilities (vSNFs) participated in a quality improvement project to control the spread of highly prevalent carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE). With guidance from regional project coordinators and public health departments that involved education, assistance with implementation, and adherence monitoring, the facilities implemented a CRE prevention bundle that included a hand hygiene campaign that promoted alcohol-based hand rub, contact precautions (personal protective equipment with glove/gown) for care of CRE-colonized residents, and 2% chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) wipes for routine resident bathing. We conducted a qualitative study to better understand the ways that vSNF employees engage with the implementation of such infection control measures. Methods: A PhD-candidate medical anthropologist conducted semistructured interviews with management (N = 5), nursing staff (N = 6), and certified nursing assistants (N = 6) at a vSNF in the Chicago region (Illinois) between September 2018 and November 2018. More than 11 hours of semistructured interviews were collected and transcribed. Data collection and analysis focused on identifying healthcare worker experiences during an infection control intervention. Transcriptions of the data were analyzed using thematic coding aided by MAXQDA qualitative analysis software. Results: Healthcare workers described the facility using language associated with a family environment (Table 1). Furthermore, healthcare workers demonstrated motivation to implement infection control policies (Table 2). However, healthcare workers expressed cultural and structural challenges encountered during implementation, such as their belief that some infection control measures discouraged maintenance of a home-like environment, lack of time, and understaffing. Some healthcare workers perceived that alcohol-based hand rub was ineffective over time and left unpleasant textures on the skin. Additionally, some workers did not trust the available gown and gloves used to prevent transmission. Lastly, healthcare workers typically did not prefer 2% CHG wipes over soap and water, citing residual resident postbathing smell as one indicator of CHG ineffectiveness. Conclusions: In a vSNF we found both considerable support and challenges implementing a CRE prevention bundle from the healthcare worker perspective. Healthcare workers were dedicated to recreating a home-like environment for their residents, which sometimes felt at odds with infection control interventions. Residual misconceptions (eg, alcohol-based hand rub is not effective) and negative worker perceptions (eg, permeability of contact precaution gowns and/or residue from alcohol-based hand rub) suggest that ongoing education and participation by healthcare workers in evaluating infection control products for interventions is critical.Funding: NoneDisclosures: None


2018 ◽  
Vol 51 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 149-158
Author(s):  
Silva Roncelli Vaupot ◽  
Danica Železnik

The objective of this research was to investigate the assertiveness of nursing staff members in their everyday practice. The secondary goal was to investigate whether assertiveness is related to sex, age, years of working experience, education and self-esteem. Nursing staff members are expected to have a high level of assertiveness to establish optimal professional communication and working performance. A cross-sectional study design and convenience sampling were applied. Altogether, 303 nursing staff members (88.8% female and 11.2% male; aged between 21 and 58 years) from the northeastern part of Slovenia were enrolled in the study. The participants were asked to complete an anonymous questionnaire, which consisted of the Rathus Assertiveness Schedule and the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale. The sample included 44.6% registered nurses and 55.4% nursing assistants with mean = 15.9 (SD 10.1) years of working experience. In general, the level of assertiveness by Rathus scale was low at mean = +4.0 (SD 17.2) points.


2002 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 14-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Baxter ◽  
V Cleary

A small collaborative infection control pilot project to help promote hand hygiene in local primary schools was designed by Merton, Sutton and Wandsworth (MSW) and Lambeth, Southwark and Lewisham (LSL) Health Authorities in London. The pilot consisted of a selection of four primary schools in two London Boroughs being encouraged to use fun frothy liquid soap in dispensers over the 2001 summer term. Pre- and post-intervention questionnaires were used with a selected number of staff members to ascertain actual/perceived knowledge and behaviour changes in both staff and children. All schools stated that handwashing increased during the pilot study and children actually looked forward to using the dispensers. Six of the eight schools in the pilot have agreed to expand the use of liquid soap dispensers as a result. Liquid soap was recognised as being a safe, effective and acceptable handwashing solution in communal settings, particularly when compared with bar soap, which can result in contamination with skin bacteria and Gram-negative bacilli (Reybrouck, 1986). The challenge for all schools is to ensure the message is continually reinforced for hand washing to be effective and sustainable, helped by the provision of adequate facilities.


2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (11) ◽  
pp. 1391-1410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily K. Hollingsworth ◽  
Emily A. Long ◽  
Sandra F. Simmons

The purpose of this study was to compare the quality of feeding assistance provided by trained non-nursing staff with care provided by certified nursing assistants (CNAs). Research staff provided an 8-hr training course that met federal and state requirements to non-nursing staff in five community long-term care facilities. Trained staff were assigned to between-meal supplement and/or snack delivery for 24 weeks. Using standardized observations, research staff measured feeding assistance care processes between meals across all study weeks. Trained staff, nurse aides, and upper level staff were interviewed at 24 weeks to assess staff perceptions of program impact. Trained staff performed significantly better than CNAs for 12 of 13 care process measures. Residents also consumed significantly more calories per snack offer from trained staff ( M = 130 ± 126 [ SD] kcal) compared with CNAs ( M = 77 ± 94 [ SD] kcal). The majority of staff reported a positive impact of the training program.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 5825-5825
Author(s):  
Naveen Yarlagadda ◽  
Gayatri Krishnan ◽  
Meera Mohan ◽  
Andrew Johnsrud ◽  
Frankie Wolfe ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Isolation precautions are used in hospitals to interrupt the chain of transmission of nosocomial pathogens. There are several reports that isolation negatively impacts the care given to patients. Isolation protocol compliance has been reported between 40-70% in several studies. Methods: We conducted an anonymized survey of healthcare providers assessing the knowledge, practice and perceived impact of isolation precautions. The survey was conducted in a hematopietic stem cell transplant unit and a medical unit in an academic medical center. Surveys were given to nursing staff and resident physicians working on those units. Results were analyzed using chi-square test. Results: A total of 106 responses were received, 60 from nursing staff and 46 from resident doctors. Self- reported compliance to hand hygiene practices was 59.9%, this was significantly higher on leaving as compared to entering patient rooms amongst nurses (72% vs 50%, p=0.015). Overall adherence to isolation precautions was 60.3%, surprisingly nursing staff in the transplant unit had a significantly lower rate as compared to nurses in the medicine unit (44% vs 83%, p=0.025). 70.7% of respondents felt that patients on isolation precautions have to wait longer for non-emergent care. Only 56.6% of respondents felt that patients were educated about the reasons for isolation precautions; this number was significantly lower in residents as compared to nurses (41.3% vs 68.3%, p=0.005). 77.3% felt that patients in isolation are less satisfied in the care they received. 86.9% of resident physicians felt that isolation precautions helped reduce the spread of infection vs 68.5% of nurses (p=0.025). 82% of respondents expressed overall satisfaction with infection control practices. Conclusions: In our survey, we observed a low compliance of hand hygiene and isolation practices. While respondents felt that isolation adversely impacted patient satisfaction and care, they also opined that these practices help reduce the spread of infection. Surveys can be an important tool to assess knowledge and impact of infection control practices; and can be used to direct quality improvement initiatives. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenay M. Beer ◽  
Jennifer M. Springman ◽  
Sara E. McBride ◽  
Tracy L. Mitzner ◽  
Wendy A. Rogers

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