Wash Your Hands
Sandra Swoboda MSN
“Wash your hands!” Most health care providers have heard these simple words over and over again their entire lives—whether from their mother in childhood or at work from infection-control colleagues. Despite the fact that this simple action decreases nosocomial infection and constitutes only a fraction of a provider’s day, compliance with hand hygiene is dismal. Alarmingly the intensive care unit (ICU) is associated with the lowest overall hand-hygiene compliance rates (about 50%) in the hospital, despite the fact that the need for frequent and effective hand hygiene is paramount. The consequences of poor hand hygiene are uniformly injurious and contribute to nosocomial infections that are an important source of morbidity and mortality in patients. On average, infections can complicate 8% to 10% of all hospital admissions; infection rates in the ICU occur at an even increased incidence. Studies have shown that as hand-hygiene rates improve, nosocomial infection rates go down. Reasons associated with poor compliance for proper hand hygiene include higher professional status; reluctance to experience skin irritation; poor access to supplies; “being too busy;” inattention to existing protocols; and the wearing of gloves (which is thought to “negate” the need for hand hygiene).
To briefly review, hand hygiene encompasses both hand washing with soap and water and hand rubbing with waterless alcohol-based solutions. Many health care workers falsely believe that traditional hand washing is both more efficacious and gentle on the skin. However, alcohol-based solutions are microbiologically superior, gentler on skin with less disruption to the skin’s lipid layers, and more likely to be used correctly when compared with soap-and-water washing.
Some common definitions pertaining to hand hygiene are as follows:
Hand hygiene: hand washing, antiseptic hand wash, antiseptic hand rub, surgical hand antisepsis
Hand washing: washing hands with plain (nonantimicrobial) soap and water
Hand antisepsis: antiseptic hand wash or antiseptic hand rub
Antiseptic hand wash: washing hands with soap and water or detergents containing an antiseptic agent
Antiseptic hand rub: application of waterless antiseptic agent to hands. Does not require the use of water (alcohol-based product)
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines for hand hygiene in the health care setting suggest the following:
If hands are visibly dirty or contaminated or soiled with blood or other body fluids, wash hands with nonantimicrobial soap and water or an antimicrobial soap and water.
If hands are not visibly soiled, use a waterless antiseptic agent (an alcohol-based hand rub) for routine decontamination.
Perform hand hygiene after touching blood, body fluids, secretions, excretions, and contaminated items, whether or not gloves are worn. Perform hygiene immediately after gloves are removed, between patient contacts, and when otherwise indicated to avoid transfer of micro-organisms to other patients or environments. It may be necessary to perform hand hygiene between tasks and procedures on the same patient to prevent cross-contamination of different body sites.Stay updated, free articles. Join our Telegram channel
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