TY - JOUR AU - Ay, Pinar AU - Teker, Ayse Gulsen AU - Hidiroglu, Seyhan AU - Tepe, Pinar AU - Surmen, Aysen AU - Sili, Uluhan AU - Korten, Volkan AU - Karavus, Melda PY - 2019/02/28 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - A qualitative study of hand hygiene compliance among health care workers in intensive care units JF - The Journal of Infection in Developing Countries JA - J Infect Dev Ctries VL - 13 IS - 02 SE - Original Articles DO - 10.3855/jidc.10926 UR - https://jidc.org/index.php/journal/article/view/32036345 SP - 111-117 AB - <p>Introduction: Studies indicate that adherence to hand hygiene guidelines is at suboptimal levels. We aimed to explore the reasons for poor hand hygiene compliance.</p><p>Methodology: A qualitative study based on the Theory of Planned Behavior as a framework in explaining compliance, consisting four focus group discussions and six in-depth interviews.</p><p>Results: Participants mostly practiced hand hygiene depending on the sense of "dirtiness" and "cleanliness". Some of the participants indicated that on-job training delivered by the infection control team changed their perception of "emotionally" based hand hygiene to "indication" based. Direct observations and individual feedback on one-to-one basis were the core of this training. There was low social cohesiveness and a deep polarization between the professional groups that led one group accusing the other for not being compliant.</p><p>Conclusions: The infection control team should continue delivering one-to-one trainings based on observation and immediate feedback. But there is need to base this training model on a structured behavioral modification program and test its efficacy through a quasi-experimental design. Increasing social cohesiveness and transforming the blaming culture to a collaborative safety culture is also crucial to improve compliance. High workload, problems related to work-flow and turnover should be addressed.</p> ER -