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Article

Have Hand Hygiene Practices in Two Tertiary Care Hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone, Improved in 2023 following Operational Research in 2021?

by
Matilda Mattu Moiwo
1,*,
Gladys Nanilla Kamara
1,2,
Dauda Kamara
3,
Ibrahim Franklyn Kamara
4,
Stephen Sevalie
1,2,
Zikan Koroma
3,
Kadijatu Nabie Kamara
3,
Matilda N. Kamara
5,
Rugiatu Z. Kamara
6,
Satta Sylvia Theresa Kumba Kpagoi
3,
Samuel Alie Konteh
7,
Senesie Margao
3,
Bobson Derrick Fofanah
4,
Fawzi Thomas
5,8,
Joseph Sam Kanu
3,5,
Hannock M. Tweya
9,
Hemant Deepak Shewade
10 and
Anthony David Harries
11,12
1
Ministry of Defence, Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces, Joint Medical Unit, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
2
Department of Clinical Research, Sustainable Health Systems, 34 Military Hospital Research Center, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
3
Ministry of Health and Sanitation, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
4
World Health Organization Country Office, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
5
College of Medicine and Allied Health Sciences, University of Sierra Leone, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
6
United States Centres for Diseases Control and Prevention, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
7
Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
8
Pharmacy Board of Sierra Leone, National Pharmacovigilance Centre, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
9
International Training and Education Centre for Health, Lilongwe P.O. Box 30369, Malawi
10
Division of Health Systems Research, ICMR-National Institute of Epidemiology (ICMR-NIE), Chennai 600077, India
11
International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union), 2 Rue Lantier, 75001 Paris, France
12
Department of Clinical Research, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, UK
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Trop. Med. Infect. Dis. 2023, 8(9), 431; https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8090431
Submission received: 2 August 2023 / Revised: 28 August 2023 / Accepted: 29 August 2023 / Published: 31 August 2023

Abstract

:
In 2021, an operational research study in two tertiary hospitals in Freetown showed poor hand hygiene compliance. Recommended actions were taken to improve the situation. Between February–April 2023, a cross-sectional study was conducted in the same two hospitals using the World Health Organization hand hygiene tool to assess and compare hand hygiene compliance with that observed between June–August 2021. In Connaught hospital, overall hand hygiene compliance improved from 51% to 60% (p < 0.001), and this applied to both handwash actions with soap and water and alcohol-based hand rub. Significant improvements were found in all hospital departments and amongst all healthcare worker cadres. In 34 Military Hospital (34MH), overall hand hygiene compliance decreased from 40% to 32% (p < 0.001), with significant decreases observed in all departments and amongst nurses and nursing students. The improvements in Connaught Hospital were probably because of more hand hygiene reminders, better handwash infrastructure and more frequent supervision assessments, compared with 34MH where interventions were less well applied, possibly due to the extensive hospital reconstruction at the time. In conclusion, recommendations from operational research in 2021 contributed towards the improved distribution of hand hygiene reminders, better handwash infrastructure and frequent supervision assessments, which possibly led to improved hand hygiene compliance in one of the two hospitals. These actions need to be strengthened, scaled-up and guided by ongoing operational research to promote good hand hygiene practices elsewhere in the country.

1. Introduction

Healthcare-associated infections are a major public health problem worldwide and are associated with increased hospital stay, long-term disability, increased resistance to antimicrobial drugs, poor clinical outcomes and unnecessary deaths [1,2]. Healthcare workers’ hands are crucially important with respect to transmitting the microorganisms responsible for healthcare-associated infections, and in the last 20 years, evidence has accumulated to suggest that improved hand hygiene can reduce healthcare-associated infections [3,4]. Efforts worldwide to reduce the frequency and burden of these infections have, therefore, focused on improved hand hygiene, including the implementation of the World Health Organization (WHO)’s multimodal hand hygiene strategy [5,6].
Hand hygiene practices can be assessed using a WHO standard observation tool [7], which outlines five opportunities or “moments” for observing hand hygiene within the healthcare setting. These include observing hand hygiene procedures before contact with patients and after contact with patients. This tool is widely used in various African countries and has found that, on average, there are poor levels of hand hygiene practices in various healthcare facilities in the different countries [8,9,10,11,12].
Sierra Leone has developed and launched a national strategic plan to combat antimicrobial resistance (2018–2022), as well as the National Infection Prevention Control (IPC) Guidelines (2022–2026). These guidelines clearly outline IPC activities, including hand hygiene practices, that should be implemented in healthcare facilities throughout the country [13]. Between June and August 2021, through an operational research project, hand hygiene practices were assessed using the WHO standard observational tool in two tertiary-level hospitals (34 Military Hospital—34MH—and Connaught Hospital) in Freetown, the capital city [14]. The findings from this study showed that less than 50% of hand hygiene opportunities were associated with compliance to accepted hand hygiene practices, with 34MH having a worse performance than Connaught Hospital.
Various recommendations to improve hand hygiene compliance were made at the time in the published paper [14] and in the plain language hand-out used to disseminate findings to various stakeholders [15]. The current study was, therefore, carried out to assess how the findings of the 2021 operational research were disseminated [14], whether recommendations were acted on and whether these translated into improvement in hand hygiene compliance.
The overall aim of this study was to document and assess the dissemination and impact of hand hygiene compliance interventions recommended at two tertiary hospitals (34MH and Connaught Hospital) in Freetown, comparing the period June–August, 2021 with the period February–April, 2023. The specific objectives were to: (1) describe the dissemination activities resulting from the 2021 operational research findings, recommendations made and actions taken to promote hand hygiene compliance; and (2) compare overall hand hygiene compliance between 2021 and 2023 in the two hospitals and in relation to the five opportunities for hand hygiene action, the six different hospital wards and four different cadres of healthcare worker.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Design

For objective 1, this was a descriptive study of the dissemination, recommendations and action taken as a result of the first operational research study in 2021. For objective 2, this was a cross-sectional study using the standardised WHO observation tool to measure hand hygiene compliance [7].

2.2. Setting

2.2.1. General Setting

Sierra Leone is a country on the coast of West Africa with a tropical climate and an environment that ranges from savanna to rainforests. The country has a total population of 7.5 million [16]. There are five administrative regions, within which there are sixteen districts. Sierra Leone has a healthcare system consisting of primary, secondary and tertiary care facilities under the control of the Ministry of Health and Sanitation. Health services are mainly provided by the public sector, with some of the services offered by private sector providers, non-governmental and faith-based organisations and the military establishment.

2.2.2. Site-Specific Setting

The sites included in the study were 34MH and Connaught Hospital, both tertiary care hospitals situated in Freetown. Specifically, 34MH has approximately 120 beds and serves military personnel and their dependents, as well as the civilian population. Every year, 34MH admits approximately 2000 patients to its beds [17]. Connaught Hospital has approximately 300 beds and caters largely for the civilian population. Every year, Connaught Hospital admits approximately 4900 patients to its beds [18]. These two hospitals have been challenged in recent years with poor handwash infrastructure and inadequate access to clean running water. Veronica buckets were introduced to improve the water problem, although keeping these buckets filled up on a regular basis has not been easy. 34MH has also been undergoing extensive reconstruction in the last one year, which has compromised hand washing facilities and infrastructure.
Each hospital has IPC focal persons trained by the National Infection Prevention and Control Unit. These focal persons identify IPC link personnel (who are mostly nurses) in each ward to support IPC practices. One of the important responsibilities of the IPC focal persons is to carry out quarterly audits of hand hygiene compliance among the different cadres of healthcare worker.

2.3. Study Population

The study population included healthcare workers at the two tertiary hospitals (34MH and Connaught), Freetown, Sierra Leone, who were observed for hand hygiene compliance between February and April 2023 with their findings compared with those of health workers who were observed for hand hygiene compliance between June and August 2021.

2.4. Study Procedures

2.4.1. Dissemination Activities, Recommendations and Interventions

Dissemination tools that included a plain language handout [15], a short (3-min) and long (10-min) power point presentation and an elevator pitch were developed during a Structured Operational Research Training Initiative (SORT IT) course module in May 2022 [19], which was held two months after the publication of the paper. A stakeholder list was also developed that prioritised key policy and decision makers to whom dissemination of the key findings should be carried out. Between May 2022 and January 2023, information was collected on the dissemination meetings held and their dates, the frequency of use of the dissemination tools and the number and cadre of key personnel who attended these meetings. Recommendations and actions that were proposed in the published paper and plain language hand-out [14,15] were documented.

2.4.2. Hand Hygiene Compliance

In each hospital, the IPC link personnel observed hand hygiene compliance in the designated hospital wards. The healthcare workers observed included doctors, nurses, nursing students and laboratory technicians as they went about performing routine patient care.
The same methodology as was used in the previous study for observing and recording hand hygiene compliance [14] was used in this current study. In brief, before the data collection started in February 2023, a refresher training on how to use the WHO hand hygiene observation tool [7] was conducted for the IPC link personnel.
During each session (around 10–15 min), the IPC link person quietly (without the healthcare worker being aware) recorded the compliance to hand hygiene opportunities that included use of ABHR or hand washing. This silent observation was to prevent or reduce bias such as the Hawthorne effect, where people change their behaviour because they know and are aware that they are being observed [20]. We targeted 300–400 sessions, approximately the same number as were conducted in 2021 [14].

2.5. Data Variables and Sources of Data

The data variables were aligned to the study objectives.
For Objective 1, these included: number and type of dissemination meetings, trainings conducted for hospital staff and numbers of IPC personnel and staff trained; in the six hospital wards, observed on a monthly basis between February and April 2023, numbers of hand hygiene reminders and job aids on the tables and walls and the handwash infrastructure in place at that time; and supervisions, monitoring visits and hospital assessments conducted from May 2022. These data were obtained from records, personal observations and routine monitoring visits.
For Objective 2 and 3, these included: hospital (34MH, Connaught); date of hand hygiene session; duration of session in minutes; use of handwash or ABHR; the opportunities for hand hygiene actions and hand hygiene actions in the different hospital wards and amongst different healthcare worker cadres. The sources of data were the completed observation forms using the WHO standard hand hygiene observation tool.

2.6. Analysis and Statistics

We single-entered the data into Excel and exported this to STATA (version 18, StataCorp. 2023. Stata Statistical Software: Release 18. College Station, TX: StataCorp LLC.3.1) for analysis. Dissemination activities, recommendations and actions taken were described using frequencies and proportions. For hand hygiene variables, each hand hygiene opportunity was the unit of analysis. Hand hygiene compliance was calculated as a percentage by dividing the number of handwash actions taken by the number of opportunities for hand washing. The hand hygiene practices in this study for both hospitals and for the five opportunities for hand hygiene actions, for the six different hospital wards and the four different cadres of healthcare worker were compared with those observed and reported in the same two hospitals during June–August 2021 [14]. Comparisons were made using the chi-square test. The results were considered significant at the 5% level (p < 0.05, two-tail).

3. Results

3.1. Dissemination, Trainings, Recommendations and Actions following the 2021 Study

Dissemination activities included a National SORT IT dissemination meeting in November 2022 and two hospital meetings with hospital staff each at 34MH and Connaught between May and August 2022.
There were no funds for the residential training of healthcare workers on hand hygiene compliance. However, there were “on the job” trainings: one full-day-training on hand hygiene compliance at Connaught Hospital on all the wards with 30 staff (general staff and IPC staff) and three half-day trainings on hand hygiene compliance at 34MH with a total of 100–150 staff trained.
Between April 2022 and May 2023, the National Infection Prevention and Control Unit carried out 11 supervisory and IPC assessments at Connaught Hospital and six supervisory and IPC assessments at 34MH, with assessment grades being consistently ≥ 85%.
The recommendations and actions taken to improve hand hygiene compliance are shown in Table 1.
Observations were made each month between February and April 2023, with the recommended actions and interventions being the same at each of these times. Connaught Hospital performed better than 34MH with more hand hygiene reminders/job aids on walls and tables and more infrastructure available for ABHR and hand washing. Overall, there were 8 handwash stations per 100 beds in 34MH compared with 17 handwash stations per 100 beds in Connaught. Within each hospital, the department of medicine performed best with the surgical department a close second.

3.2. Comparison of Hand Hygiene Actions between the Two Hospitals

There were 7206 opportunities for hand hygiene actions observed over 327 sessions in 2023 compared with 10,461 opportunities observed over 423 sessions in 2021.
Hand hygiene compliance overall and for ABHR and handwash with soap and water in the two hospitals between 2023 and 2021 is shown in Figure 1.
In 34MH (Figure 1a), there was a significant decline in hand hygiene compliance overall (40% to 32%, p < 0.001), although this only applied to handwash (20% to 13%, p < 0.001) and did not apply to ABHR (20% to 19%, p = 0.24). In Connaught Hospital (Figure 1b), there was a significant improvement in hand hygiene compliance overall (51% to 60%, p < 0.001), and this applied to both ABHR (27% to 32%, p < 0.001) and hand wash (23% to 28%, p < 0.001).

3.3. Hand Hygiene Actions in Relation to Five Opportunities

Hand hygiene actions in relation to the five opportunities for a hand hygiene action in each hospital are shown in Table 2.
In both hospitals, and as observed in 2021, the lowest hand hygiene compliance overall was before touching a patient or before conducting a clean/aseptic procedure, while the best hand hygiene compliance overall was after body fluid exposure. The two hospitals, however, differed significantly in performance. Hand hygiene compliance was significantly worse for all five opportunities in 34MH. In Connaught Hospital, hand hygiene compliance was significantly better before an aseptic procedure, after bodily fluid exposure and after touching a patient. There was no significant difference before touching a patient, but a significant decrease after touching a patient’s surroundings compared with 2021.

3.4. Hand Hygiene Actions in Relation to Hospital Departments/Wards

Hand hygiene actions in relation to hospital departments/wards in each hospital are shown in Table 3.
In 34MH, hand hygiene compliance significantly decreased in all departments/wards between 2021 and 2023. In contrast, in Connaught Hospital, hand hygiene compliance significantly increased in all departments/wards except for the paediatric ward and accident and emergency in 2023 compared with 2021.

3.5. Hand Hygiene Actions in Relation to Type of Healthcare Worker

The hand hygiene actions in relation to type of health worker in each hospital are shown in Table 4. In 34MH, there was a mixed picture when comparing 2023 with 2021, with hand hygiene compliance significantly improving in doctors but significantly decreasing in nurses and nursing assistants. In contrast, in Connaught Hospital there was a significant improvement in hand hygiene compliance in all healthcare workers between 2021 and 2023. Doctors particularly showed a significant improvement in hand hygiene compliance between 2021 and 2023 in both hospitals.

4. Discussion

The key finding of this operational research study in Freetown, Sierra Leone, was the striking difference in hand hygiene compliance between the two study periods and across the two tertiary hospitals. First, 34MH showed an overall decrease in hand hygiene compliance, mainly due to poor hand washing actions rather than poor use of ABHR, while Connaught Hospital showed an overall increase in compliance with both ABHR and hand washing. Why were there such differences between the two hospitals?
Dissemination activities, improved awareness and “on the job” trainings took place in each hospital. However, at the time of the study, 34MH was undergoing extensive reconstruction, and this might have been responsible for the generally poor placement of hand hygiene reminders and job aids on the walls and tables of the different hospital wards, the deficiencies in hand wash stations, the complete absence of running water or paper towels and interruptions of ABHR in the paediatric wards. In contrast, in Connaught Hospital, there was much better placement of hand hygiene reminders and job aids, a two-times greater distribution of hand wash stations per 100 hospital beds and running tap water available on all wards. Supervision and IPC assessments were carried out twice as frequently at Connaught Hospital compared with 34MH. Furthermore, IPC link personnel changed in 34MH during the two years, while in Connaught Hospital they mostly remained the same, thus, providing continuity of hand hygiene oversight. There were at least two IPC focal points at Connaught Hospital compared with one at 34MH, and there was a stronger hospital antimicrobial resistance (AMR) committee established at Connaught Hospital.
There is good evidence that WHO’s five-point multimodal strategy of system and improved infrastructure, education and training of healthcare workers, evaluation and feedback, health facility hand hygiene reminders and an institutional climate of safety can lead to a large, quick and sustained improvement in hand hygiene compliance in hospital settings [21]. However, solely addressing better education, improved knowledge and more awareness is not enough on its own to change hand hygiene behaviour [22]. Studies in various African hospital settings have found a significant and positive association between improved hand hygiene practices and the presence of hand hygiene reminders/job aids/handwash stations/and the uninterrupted presence of running water and soap [8,23,24,25,26]. These findings support our assumptions that workplace reminders, supportive hand hygiene infrastructure and more frequent supervision possibly contributed to better practices at Connaught Hospital. On that note, paper towels are another well-established important contributor to hand hygiene [27]. These were not available in either of the Freetown hospitals, and if they had been, this might have led to better hand hygiene compliance in both.
There were a number of other findings from this comparative study. Similar to the situation in 2021, we found that hand hygiene compliance in both hospitals was much better after contact with patients (self-protected opportunities) compared with before contact with patients (patient protective opportunities). These findings are in line with previous reports from other African hospitals [10,11,28,29,30,31] and from two secondary hospitals in Sierra Leone [32], where healthcare workers more readily performed hand hygiene actions to self-protect rather than for patient protection. In busy wards with high patient workloads, hand hygiene compliance is reported to decrease significantly [33]. It may be that in these situations, once healthcare workers have washed hands after touching a patient, they may feel it is unnecessary to repeat the procedure before seeing or touching the next patient. This is an area that requires qualitative research to understand the behaviour.
Hand hygiene compliance deteriorated in all hospital departments and wards at 34MH, with compliance being uniformly between 30–33%, while at Connaught Hospital there was an overall improvement in all departments with compliance in medicine, surgery, paediatrics and intensive care being above 60%. The difference between the two hospitals may again reflect the far better distribution of hand wash stations and hand wash infrastructure in the Connaught Hospital wards compared with those in 34MH. While previous studies in African settings have shown little difference between departments and wards [28,30], a recent study in Eastern Ethiopia showed an improvement in hand hygiene actions in medical and surgical wards over time [34], findings that are in line with what we found at Connaught Hospital over the two-year period.
In both hospitals in Freetown, it was encouraging to see an improvement in hand hygiene compliance in doctors. Previous studies have found that medical doctors are less likely to practice good hand hygiene compared with other cadres of staff [35,36]. In African settings particularly, hand hygiene compliance in doctors has been consistently low and inferior to nurses and other healthcare worker cadres [10,28,30,37,38]. The reasons for this improvement in doctors in our study are unclear. They might be related to COVID-19 pandemic behavioural change or because of the involvement of medical doctors in the implementation of IPC programs in the hospitals. All of these points deserve further investigation, as is the need to understand why hand hygiene compliance in nurses in 34MH declined so significantly between the two years.
The strengths of this study were the documentation of dissemination activities and actions taken following the 2021 research study, the large number of hand hygiene opportunities observed, the use of the same WHO hand hygiene observation tool in the two studies and the conduct and reporting of the study according to Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) [39].
However, there were a few limitations. Due to time constraints in 2023, we were not able to match the 10,000 hand hygiene opportunities that we observed in 2021, although we came close at just over 7000. As stated previously, hand hygiene compliance decreases with increasing patient workload [33], and it would have been helpful to have measured patient workload in the two hospitals and between the different hospital wards. Despite taking precautions in silent observation on hand hygiene practice, we cannot completely exclude the Hawthorne effect [40]. Finally, we focused these two studies in 2021 and 2023 on two tertiary hospitals and our findings may not be generalizable to other facilities in Sierra Leone.
In spite of these limitations, there are three important implications and recommendations. First, although we are not in a position to attribute cause and effect, it would appear from our findings in Connaught Hospital that hand hygiene reminders, job aids and good handwash infrastructure contributed towards improved hand hygiene compliance on the ground. Sierra Leone is also a local producer of ABHR, placing the country in a very good position to take this important intervention forward and make it widely available throughout the wards in all hospitals in the country. External supervision and hospital assessments need to particularly focus on whether there is adequate handwash infrastructure.
Second, despite Connaught Hospital having apparently sufficient handwash infrastructure, healthcare workers failed to practice hand hygiene actions in 40% of opportunities, so improvements are needed. We previously suggested new ways to improve hand hygiene actions such as use of “emojis” or “positive nudges”, interdepartmental competition, positive reinforcements and so on [14]. In Nigeria, the installation of voice reminders in hospital wards significantly improved hand hygiene compliance [41], and in Finland, regular observations and feedback over a seven-year period in medical and surgical wards resulted in improved compliance amongst doctors and nurses [42]. These innovations could be added to the list.
Third, while trying to improve hand hygiene practices in the two tertiary hospitals in the study, more needs to be carried out to expand the evidence base in Sierra Leone. Hand hygiene studies need to be conducted in other healthcare facilities throughout the country, and more qualitative research needs to be carried out to understand the enablers and, particularly, the barriers to better hand hygiene practice.

5. Conclusions

Following an operational research study in 2021 on hand hygiene compliance in two tertiary hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone, which led to recommendations and actions for improvement, a follow-up study on hand hygiene practices using the same methodology was conducted in 2023. Between the two years, hand hygiene compliance significantly improved in Connaught Hospital and was associated with better placement of hand hygiene reminders, good hand wash infrastructure and more frequent supervisions. Hand hygiene reminders, handwash infrastructure and supervisions were inferior at 34MH and, combined with the extensive reconstruction of the hospital at the time of the study, might have led to a general decrease in hand hygiene compliance in that hospital. This study reinforces the importance of good handwash infrastructure in promoting hand hygiene compliance. Other recommendations include the addition of innovative ways to encourage healthcare workers to wash their hands and continued quantitative and qualitative operational research to build the evidence base in healthcare facilities throughout the country and at different levels of the healthcare system.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, M.M.M., D.K.,G.N.K., H.M.T., H.D.S. and A.D.H.; methodology, M.M.M., D.K., G.N.K., S.S., Z.K., I.F.K., K.N.K., M.N.K., R.Z.K., S.S.T.K.K., S.A.K., S.M., B.D.F., F.T., J.S.K., H.M.T., H.D.S. and A.D.H.; validation, M.M.M., D.K., H.M.T., H.D.S. and A.D.H.; formal analysis, M.M.M., D.K., H.M.T., H.D.S. and A.D.H.; investigation, M.M.M.; resources, I.F.K.; data curation, M.M.M., H.M.T. and H.D.S.; writing—original draft preparation, M.M.M., D.K., H.D.S. and A.D.H.; writing—review and editing, M.M.M., D.K., G.N.K., S.S., Z.K., I.F.K., K.N.K., M.N.K., R.Z.K., S.S.T.K.K., S.A.K., S.M.; B.D.F., F.T., J.S.K., H.M.T., H.D.S. and A.D.H.; visualization, M.M.M., D.K., H.M.T., H.D.S. and A.D.H.; supervision, M.M.M.; project administration, M.M.M. We thank the IPC focal points and IPC link personnel for their dedication in observing hand hygiene opportunities and collecting data on hand hygiene actions. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, represented by its department of health and social care (DHSC) has contributed designated funding for this SORT IT-AMR initiative, which is branded as the NIHR-TDR partnership, grant number AMR HQTDR 2220608. The APC was funded by DHSC. TDR is able to conduct its work thanks to the commitment and support from a variety of funders. A full list of TDR donors is available at: https://tdr.who.int/about-us/our-donors (accessed 30 August 2023).

Institutional Review Board Statement

For the previous hand hygiene operational research [14], ethics approval was obtained from the Sierra Leone Ethics and Scientific Review Committee (SLESRC) on 5 July 2021 and also from the Ethics Advisory Group, International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, Paris, France (21 June 2021, EAG number 09/21). For the current operational research, permission and ethics approval was obtained on 23 March 2023 for collecting data using an observational method from SLESCR. The study also received approval from the Union Ethics Advisory Group (EAG), The International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, Paris, France (28 March 2023, EAG number 05/2023).

Informed Consent Statement

This study was a recognized component of infection prevention and control activities and as such, healthcare workers were observed silently for hand hygiene practices while they performed their routine duties. There was no recording of individual identifiable information. As such, written informed consent was deemed not to be necessary and the study was approved by the international and national ethics committees.

Data Availability Statement

The datasets used in this paper have been deposited at M9.figshare.23300417 (accessed on 6 June 2023), and they are available under a CC BY 4.0 licence.

Acknowledgments

This research was conducted through the Structured Operational Research and Training Initiative (SORT IT), a global partnership coordinated by TDR, the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases at the World Health Organization. The specific SORT IT program that led to these study protocols included a partnership of TDR with the WHO country offices and ministries of health of Ghana, Nepal and Sierra Leone. It was implemented along with The Tuberculosis Research and Prevention Center Non-Governmental Organization, Armenia; The International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases, Paris, France and South East Asia offices, Delhi, India; Medecins Sans Frontières—Luxembourg, Luxembourg; ICMR–National Institute of Epidemiology, Chennai, India; Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium; Damien Foundation, Kathmandu, Nepal and Brussels, Belgium; CSIR water institute, Accra, Ghana; Kitampo Health Research Center, Accra, Ghana; Environmental Protection Agency, Accra, Ghana; The University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana, National Training and Research Centre in Rural Health, Maferinyah, Guinea.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results.

Open Access Statement

In accordance with WHO’s open-access publication policy for all work funded by WHO or authored/co-authored by WHO staff members, WHO retains the copyright of this publication through a Creative Commons Attribution IGO license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/legalcode, accessed on 30 August 2023) which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original work is properly cited.

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Figure 1. Comparison of hand hygiene compliance (and in relation to use of ABHR or hand wash) between June–August 2021 and February–April 2023 in two tertiary hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone: (a) = 34 Military Hospital (34MH); and (b) = Connaught Hospital. ABHR = alcohol-based hand rub; HH = hand hygiene.
Figure 1. Comparison of hand hygiene compliance (and in relation to use of ABHR or hand wash) between June–August 2021 and February–April 2023 in two tertiary hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone: (a) = 34 Military Hospital (34MH); and (b) = Connaught Hospital. ABHR = alcohol-based hand rub; HH = hand hygiene.
Tropicalmed 08 00431 g001
Table 1. Recommendations and actions taken to improve hand hygiene compliance between February and April 2023 in the departments and wards of the two tertiary hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Table 1. Recommendations and actions taken to improve hand hygiene compliance between February and April 2023 in the departments and wards of the two tertiary hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone.
RecommendationActionMedicineSurgeryPaediatricsAccident and
Emergency
Intensive CareObstetrics/
Gynaecology
34MH
Place HH reminders/job aids in hospital departments No. HH reminders and job aids placed on walls or tables3212-2
Improve hand wash infrastructure at hand wash stationsNo. Hand wash stations3212-2
No. Running taps 0000-2
No. Veronica buckets3212-2
No. Receiving bowls3212-2
No. Soap items 2202-2
No. Paper towels0000-0
No. ABHR1101-1
Improve ABHR
Supplies
ABHR supplied monthlyYesYes NoYes-Yes
ABHR missing monthlyNoNoNoNo-No
Connaught Hospital
Place HH reminders/job aids in hospital departments No. HH reminders and job aids placed on walls or Tables1816688-
Improve hand wash infrastructure at hand wash stationsNo. Hand wash stations1616686-
No. Running taps88444-
No. Veronica buckets88242-
No. Receiving bowls88242-
No. Soap items 1616466-
No. Paper towels00000-
No. ABHR88222-
Improve ABHR
Supplies
ABHR supplied monthlyYes YesYesYesYes-
ABHR missing monthlyNoNoNoNoYes-
Footnotes: 34MH = 34 Military Hospital; HH = hand hygiene; No. = Number; ABHR = alcohol-based hand rub.
Table 2. Comparison of hand hygiene compliance, in relation to the five opportunities for a hand hygiene action, between June–August 2021 and February–April 2023 in two tertiary hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Table 2. Comparison of hand hygiene compliance, in relation to the five opportunities for a hand hygiene action, between June–August 2021 and February–April 2023 in two tertiary hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Hospital and Type of HH Action June to August 2021February to April 2023Change in HH Compliance 2023 v 2021p Value
Opportunities
for HH Action
HH Actions
Performed
Opportunities
for HH Action
HH Actions
Performed
nn(%)nn(%)
34MH
Total opportunities:2072838 (40)45291446 (32)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Bef-pat602 120 (20)1189140 (12)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Bef-aspet285 89 (31)26525 (9)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Aft-b.f.315 237 (75)760507 (68)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Aft-pat473238 (50)1537593 (39)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Aft.p.surr.397 154 (39)778181 (23)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Not recorded------
Connaught Hospital
Total opportunities:8389 4248 (51)26771605 (60)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Bef-pat2642 672 (25)630151 (24)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i0030.45
Bef-aspet754 261(35)8461 (73)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Aft-b.f.685 543(79)297288 (97)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Aft-pat2248 1539 (69)1119920(82)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Aft.p.surr.2050 1228 (60)547185(34)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Not recorded 105 (50)00 (0)
Footnotes: Observations made using the WHO hand hygiene standard observation tool [7]. HH = hand hygiene; HH action = alcohol-based hand rub or hand wash; Bef-pat = before a patient is touched; Bef-aspet = before performing a clean or aseptic procedure; Aft-b.f. = after exposure to body fluids; Aft-pat = after touching a patient; Aft.p.surr. = after touching the surroundings of a patient; 34MH = 34 Military Hospital. Percentages are row percentages. p values represent comparisons of hand hygiene actions between each period carried out using chi square tests.
Table 3. Comparison of hand hygiene compliance in relation to hospital departments between June–August 2021 and February–April 2023 in two tertiary hospitals in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Table 3. Comparison of hand hygiene compliance in relation to hospital departments between June–August 2021 and February–April 2023 in two tertiary hospitals in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Hospital and Department/Ward June to August 2021February to April 2023Change in HH Compliance 2023 v 2021p Value
Opportunities for HH ActionHH actions
Performed
Opportunities
for HH Action
HH Actions Performed
nn(%)nn(%)
34MH
Total opportunities2072 838 (40)45291446(32)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Medical ward401 161 (40)911304(33)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i0010.02
Surgical ward555 214 (39)960317(33)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i0010.03
Paediatric ward78 42(54)764239(31)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Accident and Emergency413 187 (45)1118331(30)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Obstetrics/Gynaecology468 157 (34)776255(33)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Not recorded15777(49)00(0)
Connaught Hospital
Total opportunities8389 4248(51)26771605(60)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Medical ward3088 1427 (46)916562(61)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Surgical ward22711195(53)1002614(61)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Paediatric ward263165(63)174114(66)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i0030.55
Intensive care536 279(52)12990(70)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Accident and Emergency231130(56)456225(49)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i0030.09
Obstetrics/Gynaecology3111(36)---
Not recorded19691041(53)00(0)
Footnotes: Observations made using the WHO hand hygiene standard observation tool [7]. HH = hand hygiene; HH action = alcohol-based hand rub or hand wash; 34MH = 34 Military hospital. Percentages are row percentages. p values represent comparisons of hand hygiene actions between each period carried out using chi square tests. 34 Military Hospital did not have an intensive care unit; Connaught Hospital did not have an obstetrics/gynaecology department in 2023.
Table 4. Comparison of hand hygiene compliance in relation to different healthcare worker cadres between June–August 2021 and February–April 2023 in two tertiary hospitals in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Table 4. Comparison of hand hygiene compliance in relation to different healthcare worker cadres between June–August 2021 and February–April 2023 in two tertiary hospitals in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Hospital and Department/Ward June to August 2021February to April 2023Change in HH Compliance 2023 v 2021p Value
Opportunities for HH ActionHH actions
Performed
Opportunities for HH ActionHH Actions
Performed
nn(%)nn(%)
34MH
Total opportunities2072 838 (40)45291446(32)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Doctor347 131(38)911545(60)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Nurse1582 664(42)2388627(26)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Nursing student62 30(48)564154(27)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i001<0.001
Laboratory technician81 13(16)666120(18)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i0030.66
Not recorded ------
Connaught Hospital
Total opportunities8389 4248(51)26771605(60)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Doctor1892 842(45)633340(54)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Nurse5112 2846(56)1413856 (61)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Nursing student1032 486(47)389279(72)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Laboratory technician351 72(21)242130 (54)Tropicalmed 08 00431 i002<0.001
Not recorded22(100)00(0)
Footnotes: Observations made using the WHO hand hygiene standard observation tool [7]. HH = hand hygiene; HH action = alcohol-based hand rub or hand wash; 34MH = 34 Military Hospital. Percentages are row percentages. p values represent comparisons of hand hygiene actions between each period carried out using chi square tests.
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Moiwo, M.M.; Kamara, G.N.; Kamara, D.; Kamara, I.F.; Sevalie, S.; Koroma, Z.; Kamara, K.N.; Kamara, M.N.; Kamara, R.Z.; Kpagoi, S.S.T.K.; et al. Have Hand Hygiene Practices in Two Tertiary Care Hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone, Improved in 2023 following Operational Research in 2021? Trop. Med. Infect. Dis. 2023, 8, 431. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8090431

AMA Style

Moiwo MM, Kamara GN, Kamara D, Kamara IF, Sevalie S, Koroma Z, Kamara KN, Kamara MN, Kamara RZ, Kpagoi SSTK, et al. Have Hand Hygiene Practices in Two Tertiary Care Hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone, Improved in 2023 following Operational Research in 2021? Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease. 2023; 8(9):431. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8090431

Chicago/Turabian Style

Moiwo, Matilda Mattu, Gladys Nanilla Kamara, Dauda Kamara, Ibrahim Franklyn Kamara, Stephen Sevalie, Zikan Koroma, Kadijatu Nabie Kamara, Matilda N. Kamara, Rugiatu Z. Kamara, Satta Sylvia Theresa Kumba Kpagoi, and et al. 2023. "Have Hand Hygiene Practices in Two Tertiary Care Hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone, Improved in 2023 following Operational Research in 2021?" Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 8, no. 9: 431. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8090431

APA Style

Moiwo, M. M., Kamara, G. N., Kamara, D., Kamara, I. F., Sevalie, S., Koroma, Z., Kamara, K. N., Kamara, M. N., Kamara, R. Z., Kpagoi, S. S. T. K., Konteh, S. A., Margao, S., Fofanah, B. D., Thomas, F., Kanu, J. S., Tweya, H. M., Shewade, H. D., & Harries, A. D. (2023). Have Hand Hygiene Practices in Two Tertiary Care Hospitals, Freetown, Sierra Leone, Improved in 2023 following Operational Research in 2021? Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease, 8(9), 431. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8090431

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