AI Article Synopsis

  • The NICU uses family participatory care, encouraging parents to be involved in the care of their sick newborns.
  • There is concern that parents may bring in infections due to inconsistent handwashing practices.
  • A quality improvement team successfully improved hand hygiene compliance from 20% to 80% in 9 weeks through targeted changes.

Article Abstract

In our newborn intensive care unit (NICU), we practise family participatory care, where the unit staff encourage parents and attendants of sick newborns to partner with them and be involved in care for their babies. There remains a concern that this practice may increase the risk of nosocomial infections being carried into the unit by parent-attendants. Staff observed that handwashing behaviours were suboptimal and inconsistent among parent-attendants. With facilitation from an improvement coach, we formed a quality improvement team of NICU staff to improve hand hygiene practices among attendants. From a baseline estimate of around 20% of attendants adhering to hand hygiene standards, the team planned to reach a target of 80% over 8 weeks by introducing a series of changes. At the end of 9 weeks, 80% of attendants were following standard hand hygiene practices.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9594575PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2022-001811DOI Listing

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