Educational Resource Blog FOR and about Nursing...
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Infection Control: Hand hygiene in the OR: Using evidence-based practices...
Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) account for an estimated 1.7 million infections and 99,000 associated deaths each year.1
The number one way to prevent these infections is hand hygiene,
according to the CDC and the World Health Organization (WHO) (see A brief history of hand hygiene).
The Joint Commission advocates following current CDC or WHO hand
hygiene guidelines to improve hand hygiene compliance and decrease the
incidence of HAIs.2-4 This article describes the current evidence-based practices for hand hygiene in the perioperative setting.
As
evidence-based practices are published, nurses need to become familiar
with them so that they can provide optimal safe patient care. For
example, the AORN board of directors revised one of its recommended
practices for hand hygiene in 2009.6
The revised recommendation called for performing a surgical hand scrub
before donning sterile gloves, and noted that healthcare providers could
use an antimicrobial surgical scrub agent or an alcohol-based
antiseptic surgical hand rub that met FDA requirements for surgical hand
antisepsis.5
(Previous guidelines didn't allow the option of an FDA-approved
alcohol-based antiseptic surgical hand rub.) However, a year after this
recommendation was released, some facilities appear to still be
following older guidelines: In the August 2010 issue of AORN Journal,
an anonymous reader asked why AORN's new standards no longer called for
a traditional surgical hand scrub using a brush at the beginning of the
day, a practice still reflected in the facility's policy manual.7
AORN's standards note that the use of a brush for surgical hand scrub
isn't necessary and that scrubbing with a brush can damage skin,
creating microcrevices that encourage bacterial growth and increased
bacterial load.5
2010-AORN
publishes recommendations for hand hygiene in the perioperative
setting. These recommendations concur with the 2002 CDC and 2009 WHO
guidelines
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