A Potential Way to Decrease the Know-Do Gap in Hospital Infection Control in Vietnam: “Providing Specific Figures on Healthcare-Associated Infections to the Hospital Staff Can ‘Wake Them Up’ to Change Their Behaviour”
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Collection and Participants
2.2. Data Analysis
2.3. Ethical Approval
3. Results
3.1. Sub-Theme 1: Hospital Staff Were Knowledgeable of HAIs, but They Were not Aware of the HAI Situation in Their Hospitals
3.1.1. Healthcare-Associated Infections
“An HAI, firstly, is an infection that the patients have acquired in the hospital or in another healthcare facility, secondly symptoms of infection, that were absent at the time of admission, have appeared 48 h after admission. ”(FGD 5—nurses, rural hospital)
“When doctors use one pair of gloves for examination of different patients, infections can be transferred from one infected patient to others.”(FGD 3—cleaning workers, urban hospital)
“We are mainly afraid that we get infections, so we wear gloves and protection masks, pay attention to injection needles…Our work is just cleaning and throwing away the waste. Regarding HAIs, that is the hospital’s responsibility.”(FGD 6—cleaning workers, rural hospital)
3.1.2. Situation of Healthcare-Associated Infections
One said: “In fact, in our hospital there are almost no HAIs. The evidence is that the rate of surgical site infections is very low.”(FGD 4—doctors, rural hospital)
Another one argued: “I don’t think that we have few cases of HAIs. We couldn’t detect them [HAIs] and we do not have statistical data.”(FGD 4—doctors, rural hospital)
“Almost every patient staying for a long time, more than five days, gets HAI, for example patients with cerebrovascular accident, respiratory infection, catheter placement and patients who receive mechanical ventilation for a long time.”(FGD 2—nurses, urban hospital)
“We cannot get data from anywhere … In the hospital there might be many HAIs in reality.”(FGD 1—doctors, urban hospital)
3.1.3. Difficulties in Controlling HAIs
“We have to use one oxygen generator with the same oxygen tube during 2–3 days, even 10 days for several patients, causing high risks for getting HAIs.”(FGD 3—doctors, rural hospital)
“We cannot culture and test susceptibility of bacteria due to the absence of a microbiological laboratory, so we cannot make conclusions about suspected cases if they are HAIs or not.”(FGD 4—nurses, rural hospital)
“We do training every year but the practices (regarding infection control) are still poor.”(II 2—a hospital manager, urban hospital)
“Standard procedures exist but are not followed. Trainings are organised but the practices remain poor. Providing specific figures on HAIs to the hospital staff can ‘wake them up’ to change their behaviour.”(II 5—a hospital manager, rural hospital)
3.2. Sub-Theme 2: Hospital Staff Were Aware of the Importance of Hand Hygiene in Preventing Healthcare-Associated Infections, But They Acknowledged Poor Hand Hygiene Practices in Their Hospitals
3.2.1. Importance of Hand Hygiene
“Hand hygiene is very important because it contributes to preventing HAIs. If everybody followed hand hygiene procedures, the rate of HAIs could be reduced a lot.”(FGD 5—nurses, rural hospital)
3.2.2. Reasons for Noncompliance
“Examining 100–150 patients per day, we do not even find time to put our heads up to see the faces of the patients, not to mention carrying out hand-washing procedures.”(II 1—a hospital manager, urban hospital)
“Here in our hospital a doctor may have to examine about 70, even 100 patients in the morning. If you count 30 s per patient to wash the hands, for 100 patients—50 min excluding time for moving and wiping hands. It is impossible to follow.”(FGD 4—doctors, rural hospital)
“Sometimes liquid for hand washing is available, but they do not use.”(FGD 1—doctors, urban hospital)
3.3. Sub-Theme 3: Hospital Staff Acknowledged the Importance of Healthcare Waste Management, but They Were Not Aware of Healthcare Waste Treatment in Their Hospitals
3.3.1. Healthcare Waste Management
“With bandages, injection needles used for HIV or hepatitis B patients, if we do not classify well, we may touch them by chance, and it is easy to get infections … Two years ago in the Department of Emergency there was such a case. When a nurse was giving an anesthetic injection to a HIV positive patient, unfortunately she got punctured on her hand.”(FGD 1—doctors, urban hospital)
“Healthcare waste—in yellow bags, domestic waste—green bags, hard things in black bags and white bags for recycled waste … Sharp things are put into yellow boxes, and then the boxes are put into black bags.”(FGD 6—cleaning workers, rural hospital)
“In our department, we only do waste classification, put it in the right bags, then we do not know where they are taken and treated.”(FGD 2—doctors, rural hospital)
3.3.2. Situation of Healthcare Waste Management
“Patient relatives throw waste everywhere. They even throw big diapers used by patients into the drains, clogging the drains.”(FGD 3—doctors, rural hospital)
4. Discussion
4.1. Lack of Resources for Infection Control
4.2. Cleaning Workers’ Poor Understanding of Controlling HAIs
4.3. Patients and Their Relatives’ Poor Adherence to Hygiene Guideline and Procedures
4.4. The Know-Do Gap
4.5. Measures to Improve Infection Control Practice
4.6. Methodological Consideration
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Interview/Discussion Guide |
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|
Interview Code | Hospital | Category of Staff | Number of Participants | Number of Years of Experience | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Male | Female | ||||
II 1 | Urban | Hospital manager | - | 1 | 28 |
II 2 | Urban | Hospital manager | - | 1 | 27 |
II 3 | Urban | Hospital manager | 1 | - | 31 |
II 4 | Rural | Hospital manager | 1 | - | 26 |
II 5 | Rural | Hospital manager | 1 | - | 14 |
II 6 | Rural | Hospital manager | 1 | - | 32 |
FGD 1 | Urban | Doctors (Dept. of Neurology, Dept. of General Internal Medicine, Dept. of Emergency and Intensive Care, Dept. of Occupational Diseases) | 3 | 3 | 1–25 |
FGD 2 | Urban | Nurses (Dept. of Surgery, Dept. of General Internal Medicine, Dept. of Emergency and Intensive Care, Dept. of Nursing) | 2 | 5 | 1–27 |
FGD 3 | Urban | Cleaning workers (Dept. of Emergency and Intensive Care, Dept. of Cardiology, Dept. of Surgery, Dept. of Endocrinology, Dept. of General Internal Medicine, Dept. of Gastroenterology, Public area, Cleaning Administrator) | - | 9 | 1–12 |
FGD 4 | Rural | Doctors (Dept. of Surgery, Dept. of Obstetrics, Dept. of Pediatrics, Dept. of Ophthalmology Otorhinolaryngology, Dept. of Emergency and Intensive Care, Dept. of General Planning) | 5 | 3 | 1–20 |
FGD 5 | Rural | Nurses (Dept. of Nursing, Dept. of Infectious Diseases, Dept. of Surgery, Dept. of Ophthalmology and Otorhinolaryngology, Dept. of General Examination, Dept. of Emergency and Intensive Care, Dept. of Traditional Medicine, Dept. of Obstetrics) | 1 | 7 | 1–32 |
FGD 6 | Rural | Cleaning workers (Administration area, Dept. of Imaging and Radiology, Dept. of Surgery, Public area, Dept. of Traditional Medicine, Dept. of Emergency and Intensive Care) | - | 6 | 1–2 |
Total | 15 | 35 |
Condensed Meaning Units | Codes | Category |
---|---|---|
- HAIs are the infections occurring in patents in the hospital after admission - During stay in the hospital, patients can get infections | Occurring in the hospital | Healthcare-associated infections |
- There are infections incubating for 5 days, 7 days and even longer, so the infections may appear after discharge | Appearing after discharge | |
- Surgical site infections; hospital-acquired endometrial infections; stitches infection after giving birth - Nosocomial digestive disorders; catheter placement infection; nosocomial tuberculosis | Examples of HAIs | |
- Noncompliance with hand hygiene - Doctors don’t wash their hands after each patient - Not absolute compliance with aseptic discipline | Through hospital staff | |
- Through needle puncture or bandage - Sharing bows or cups | Through medical equipment and domestic utensils | |
- HIV and hepatitis B can be transmitted through needle puncture - Hospital waste can be a source of diseases - Hospital waste if not properly managed can lead to HAIs | Through hospital waste | |
- Infected air; tuberculosis cases from one patient to another - Respiratory infections can be transmitted within the hospital | Through the air |
Main Theme | Making data on HAIs available for health workers can improve their awareness and motivate them to put their existing knowledge into practice, thus decreasing the know-do gap in infection control | ||
Sub-themes | Sub-theme 1 | Sub-theme 2 | Sub-theme 3 |
Hospital staff were knowledgeable of HAIs, but they were not aware of the HAI situation in their hospitals | Hospital staff were aware of the importance of hand hygiene in preventing HAIs, but they acknowledged poor hand hygiene practices in their hospitals | Hospital staff acknowledged the importance of healthcare waste management, but they were not aware of healthcare waste treatment in their hospitals | |
Categories | - HAIs - Situation of HAIs - Difficulties in controlling HAIs | - Importance of hand hygiene - Reasons for noncompliance | - Healthcare waste management - Situation of healthcare waste management |
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Lien, L.T.Q.; Johansson, E.; Lan, P.T.; Chuc, N.T.K.; Thoa, N.T.M.; Hoa, N.Q.; Phuc, H.D.; Tamhankar, A.J.; Lundborg, C.S. A Potential Way to Decrease the Know-Do Gap in Hospital Infection Control in Vietnam: “Providing Specific Figures on Healthcare-Associated Infections to the Hospital Staff Can ‘Wake Them Up’ to Change Their Behaviour”. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 1549. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15071549
Lien LTQ, Johansson E, Lan PT, Chuc NTK, Thoa NTM, Hoa NQ, Phuc HD, Tamhankar AJ, Lundborg CS. A Potential Way to Decrease the Know-Do Gap in Hospital Infection Control in Vietnam: “Providing Specific Figures on Healthcare-Associated Infections to the Hospital Staff Can ‘Wake Them Up’ to Change Their Behaviour”. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(7):1549. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15071549
Chicago/Turabian StyleLien, La Thi Quynh, Eva Johansson, Pham Thi Lan, Nguyen Thi Kim Chuc, Nguyen Thi Minh Thoa, Nguyen Quynh Hoa, Ho Dang Phuc, Ashok J. Tamhankar, and Cecilia Stålsby Lundborg. 2018. "A Potential Way to Decrease the Know-Do Gap in Hospital Infection Control in Vietnam: “Providing Specific Figures on Healthcare-Associated Infections to the Hospital Staff Can ‘Wake Them Up’ to Change Their Behaviour”" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 7: 1549. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15071549
APA StyleLien, L. T. Q., Johansson, E., Lan, P. T., Chuc, N. T. K., Thoa, N. T. M., Hoa, N. Q., Phuc, H. D., Tamhankar, A. J., & Lundborg, C. S. (2018). A Potential Way to Decrease the Know-Do Gap in Hospital Infection Control in Vietnam: “Providing Specific Figures on Healthcare-Associated Infections to the Hospital Staff Can ‘Wake Them Up’ to Change Their Behaviour”. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(7), 1549. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15071549