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http://dx.doi.org/10.14371/QIH.2015.21.1.36

Factors affecting hand hygiene behavior among health care workers of intensive care units in teaching hospitals in Korea: importance of cultural and situational barriers  

Jeong, Heon-jae (Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health)
Jo, Heui-sug (Department of Health Management and Policy, School of Medicine, Kangwon National University)
Lee, Hye-jean (Department of Preventive Medicine, Kangwon National University Hospital)
Kim, Min-ji (Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania)
Yoon, Hye-yeon (Center for Patient Education, The Care Quality Research Group)
Publication Information
Quality Improvement in Health Care / v.21, no.1, 2015 , pp. 36-49 More about this Journal
Abstract
In Intensive Care Units (ICUs), where severely ill patients are treated, importance of reducing Hospital Acquired Infection (HAI) cannot be overstated. One of the simplest and most effective actions against HAI is proper hand hygiene (HH) behavior of Health Care Workers (HCWs). However, compliance varies across different cultures and different job types of HCWs (physicians, residents and nurses). This study aims to understand determinants of HH behavior by HCWs' job types in Korea. Qualitative analysis was performed based on Reasoned Action Approach style interviews with staff physicians, residents and nurses across 7 teaching hospitals. We found that all HCWs strongly believe HH is important in reducing HAI. There were, however, job type-specific HH behavior modifying factors; staff physicians stated feeling pressure to be HH behavior role model. Residents identified Quality Improvement team that measured compliance as a facilitator; a notable barrier for residents was senior physicians not washing their hands, because they were afraid of appearing impudent to their seniors. Nurses designated their chief nurse as a key referent. All participants mentioned heavy workload and lack of access to alcohol-based sanitizer as situational barriers, and sore and dry hand as deterrents to HH compliance.
Keywords
Patient safety; Hand Hygiene; Hospital acquired infection; Intensive Care Unit (ICU); Safety culture; Reasoned action approach;
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Times Cited By KSCI : 1  (Citation Analysis)
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