Background: Annually in the United States, it is estimated that 1.7 million patients acquire a healthcare-associated infection (HAI), defined as an infection acquired in a hospital or healthcare facility which results in approximately one hundred thousand deaths. Healthcare Acquired Infections (HAI) result in over 100 thousand deaths each year with one-third of these deaths preventable via behaviors such as hand washing among healthcare providers in inpatient settings. Less research has been conducted in outpatient exercise settings such as cardiac rehabilitation (CR) among patients.
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine the
effectiveness of HAI prevention strategies in a CR setting among patients.
Methods: Observations of the frequency of hand washing among
CR patients pre and post-four HAI strategies including provision of HAI
education and signs, hand washing demonstrations, an HAI prevention video, and
hand sanitizer samples. Washing hands prior to CR (WI) was observed as well as
washing hands prior to leaving the CR center (WO). Methods included recording
the frequency of WI and WO among all patients at baseline and after each of the
four interventions. Mean frequencies of WI and WO were compared among a mean of
22 - 43 CR patient visits over 12 weeks using descriptive statistics and
t-tests to determine if changes were significant pre and post-intervention
strategies.
Results: At baseline, no patients WI or WO during an
outpatient CR visit. Post interventions 1 - 4, the percentage of patients WI
and WO was 33 and 34, 32 and 26, 32 and 29, 33 and 22 respectively. At a
one-year follow up, the percentage of patients WI and WO was 40%.
Conclusion: Increases in frequency and the percentage of WI
and WO were observed among patients meriting continued examination of HAI
prevention strategies among patients in outpatient exercise settings such as
CR. Given that the provision of feedback is suggested, the examination of HAI
infection strategies outcomes in this study could benefit the patients and staff
of CR centers and be applied to other rehabilitation settings such as physical
therapy, occupational therapy, and therapeutic fitness centers.
Author (s) Details
Wendy Bjerke
Sacred Heart University, Fairfield, USA.
Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/dhrd/v4/3949
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