Toronto Rehab's new "handy" auditing tool helps health care providers improve their hand washing practices
Currently, hand hygiene auditors monitor the hand washing practices of four health care workers at once, recording each of their hand washing actions - that can be a difficult and complicated task.
"The current standard for auditing hand hygiene compliance is a paper-based observation tool that requires auditors to make subjective decisions as to whether hand washing opportunities have been seized or missed while observing health care providers and recording their actions," says
HandyAudit(TM) eases the process of collecting, recording, analyzing and reporting hand hygiene compliance practices by taking personal judgement out of determining hand washing compliance.
"Effective hand washing practices in hospitals and other health care facilities play a key role in improving patient safety and preventing the spread of potentially deadly hospital-acquired infections," adds
Each year in
The HandyAudit system consists of a personal digital assistant (PDA) and a web-based application. While observing the activities of several health care providers at a time, hand hygiene auditors use touch screen technology to simply input actions into the PDA. Auditors record typical activities performed by health care workers in the course of caring for patients, such as: entering the patient's room, touching the patient, cleaning open wounds, using an alcohol gel hand sanitizer or leaving the patient's room, etc.
Once the actions are recorded in HandyAudit, data is downloaded from the PDA to a secure website. The HandyAudit software analyzes these actions and determines whether hand washing was done at the right time or was missed. Actions are then calculated into hand hygiene compliance rates. Hand hygiene compliance calculations are based on the four critical hand cleansing opportunities as identified in the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care's hand hygiene compliance program, "Just Clean Your Hands."
The software can be tailored to comply with the hand hygiene compliance requirements in different institutions and jurisdictions across the world. The World Health Organization, for example, recently released new guidelines for monitoring hand hygiene compliance.
HandyAudit can also take the same data collected one year and track it against different or revised guidelines so that trends in hand hygiene can be seen over several years.
As the person who oversees St. Michael's Hospital's day-to-day monitoring of hand hygiene compliance, infection control physician
"Keeping your eyes on several health care workers at once while simultaneously interpreting and recording whether or not a person has washed their hands before and after touching a patient or performing a medical procedure can be extremely demanding. There is a lot of potential for errors in inputting and transcribing that information," explains
Beginning
"The HandyAudit system is a very consistent, reliable, and cost-efficient tool that health care facilities can easily add to their arsenal of infection prevention strategies," says
HandyAudit will soon be piloted in several Ontario hospitals and it is expected to be commercially available early next year.
HandyAudit was funded, in part, through a grant from the Mississauga Halton Infection Control Network and the Ontario Centres of Excellence with support from the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.
HandyAudit brochure: www.torontorehab.com/research/documents/handyauditbrochure.pdf
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