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Hand hygiene performance improves most when hospitals partner with monitoring system vendor, finds study

GOJO ICHE study on automated hand hygiene monitoring system (AHHMS)

A study by researchers at GOJO Industries that was recently published in the peer-reviewed journal Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology (ICHE) demonstrates that healthcare facilities that actively partner with their automated hand hygiene monitoring system (AHHMS) vendor are able to achieve greater improvement in hand hygiene performance — a backbone of infection control programs.

The study, The impact of automated hand hygiene monitoring with and without complementary improvement strategies on performance rates, was published online on August 22 in ICHE. Hand hygiene performance rates were estimated using the PURELL Smartlink Activity Monitoring System and showed greater sustained increases in hand hygiene performance when the hospital worked in collaboration with the vendor to implement the system and initiate complementary improvement interventions.

Major findings of the study include:

  • Automated hand hygiene monitoring system (AHHMS) in combination with clinician-based vendor support and hospital-led unit-based initiatives (Vendor + Hospital group) led to statistically significant improvements in hand hygiene performance compared with the Vendor-only, Hospital-only, or AHHMS-alone groups (>46% increase; P < 0.006). 1
  • Hospital units in the Vendor-plus-Hospital group achieved a 76% increase in hand hygiene performance compared to the Vendor-only group (46.9/26.7=1.76), a 46% increase compared to the Hospital-only group (46.9/32.1=1.46), and a 48% increase over the AHHMS-alone group (46.9/31.7=1.48). 1

With data from 58 units in 10 hospitals throughout North America — 243 million hand hygiene opportunities — this study makes an important contribution to understanding hand hygiene performance-rate improvement efforts. The evidence is clear that clinician-based support from their AHHMS vendor is a critical component that hospitals can’t overlook in their hand hygiene performance efforts. Healthcare facilities shouldn’t install an AHHMS and forget about it.

Jim Arbogast, Ph.D., the lead author of the study and Vice President of Hygiene Sciences and Public Health Advancements at GOJO Industries

The use of AHHMS has been growing over the past decade as hospitals increasingly recognize it as a valuable tool in the fight to improve healthcare worker hand hygiene. It’s been shown to provide substantially more quantitative data than direct observations and without observer bias. It provides a real-time view for infection control staff to see how well their hand hygiene performance improvement strategies are working — and if they aren’t, they can quickly adjust course.

Lori Moore, MPH, BSN, RN, CPPS, clinical educator, GOJO Industries, Co-author.

This multi-year study of multiple healthcare facilities is crucial for understanding hand hygiene because, unlike single facility studies, it directly assesses how reproducible hand hygiene rates are. I am unaware of any other multi-facility trial of this size in the literature.

Albert Parker, co-author, biostatistician at the Center for Biofilm Engineering and research professor, Montana State University

As hospitals navigate out of the acute phase of the pandemic, many are refocusing on basic, yet important, measures like hand hygiene. Because our study utilized modeled data, hospitals interested in AHHMS will have an idea of what they can expect in their own facilities when employing AHHMS with complementary strategies.

Megan DiGiorgio, MSN, RN, CIC, FAPIC, senior clinical manager, GOJO Industries, Co-author

These findings were originally accepted as a poster at the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) Decennial conference in 2020.

The study, The impact of automated hand hygiene monitoring with and without complementary improvement strategies on performance rates, is available to view on ICHE.

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