Title: The cleanyourhands campaign
1Everyones business The cleanyourhands campaign
approach to hand hygiene improvement
Dr Helen Glenister Deputy Chief Executive
2Hand hygiene promotion
- all things are difficult before they become
easy - Persian Proverb
3Why we started the workUnderstanding the
problem 2002
- Hospital acquired infection is a local, national
and international issue - - 300,000 patients per year UK 2 million US
- - 5,000 deaths UK 90,000 US
- - 1bn UK US 17-29 billion
- Good hand hygiene compliance can probably reduce
these statistics by 9-50 - Hand hygiene has an average international
compliance of around 40
4Making the right behaviour irresistible
5Starting from the user perspective
- Humans arent machines. Designing solutions in
the social - context requires understanding the human
experience and - perspective and redesigning the system to
promote, support - And sustain optimal practice. We need to identify
the - barriers to the desired behaviour, dismantle them
- and then - build new ones which make it really hard not to
do the right - thing.
- We are also habit-forming. In clean hands
Nirvana, - performing hand hygiene at the right time, every
time we - should, is intuitive, involves no need to stop,
to think, to - choose.
6The cleanyourhands campaign
- Learning from international and local examples of
improvement (Geneva, Lewisham) - Being clear about the desired behaviour
- - Decontaminating hands at every opportunity
- - Doing it at the point of care
- - Ensuring that patients can see healthcare
staff - cleaning their hands
- Understanding the barriers to compliance
- Employing social marketing techniques to overcome
them - Delivering sustainable, measurable improvements
7Why a Social Marketing model?
- What is new about social marketing is that it
brings all - the necessary tools together in a comprehensive
- strategic framework which puts the target
consumer - (or stakeholder) at the centre of our thinking.
- Institute of Social Marketing (ISM)
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9The pilot
- Six month pilot in six trusts in 2004
- Evaluated through
- Staff surveys
- Patient interview survey
- Staff interview
- Staff diary
- Staff observation
- Usage of hand rubs
10So - how irresistible was it?
- 84 staff stated posters influenced hand hygiene
- 39 staff asked at least once have you cleaned
your hands? - 97 staff comfortable being asked
- 71 patients thought they should be involved
- Product usage increased 2.5 times
- Evaluation showed compliance increased from
28-76 - If replicated nationally, could save 450 lives
and 140 million a year
11National driver
12National implementation in five phases
- Implementers
- Agreed to implement alcohol hand rubs
- Agreed to assign roles/responsibilities to ensure
NPAH remains - Agreed to assign roles/responsibilities to ensure
materials are displayed and changed - Engaged commitment from every level of the
organisation - 173/174 trusts in England and 100/100 in Wales
13Pre-campaign preparation
- Getting all levels of organisation on board,
monitoring compliance
14Logistics
15Point of care prompts (posters)
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19Microsite
- Sharing implementation best practice (microsite)
20Point of care hand rub
campaign implemented year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Campaign Refreshed. Campaign evaluated
Campaign Refreshed. Campaign evaluated
Campaign Refreshed. Campaign evaluated
Marcomms/ research/ local egs
Marcomms/ research/ local egs
Marcomms/ research/ local egs
21The broader HAI agenda
Going further faster
Department of Health
Towards Cleaner Hospitals
Saving Lives
Hand hygiene programme cleanyourhands campaign
RCA and HAI prevention
NPSA Safety improvement agenda
22An international priority
- WHO Global Alliance on Patient Safety
- Clean Care is Safer Care
23Learning en route
24Reality at the coalface Key lessons from year
one
- Correlation between culture and progress
- Product acceptability
- Ownership issues
- Local flavour is a significant factor
- Knowledge levels about HCAI and the true risks
are generally low - Correlation between public information sources
and ward - based beliefs and practice
- Leadership and role models are critical to
success - The commitment and charisma of individuals make
all the difference
25Winners what and why
- Not just a capacity issue
- Evangelism and charisma
- Culture
- Local adaptation and enhancement
- Holistic hand care
- Leadership
- Social engagement
- Fun
2610 - 40
? 100
Point of care hand rub
campaign implemented year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Campaign Refreshed. Campaign evaluated
Campaign Refreshed. Campaign evaluated
27Moving ahead through the product
cycleimprovement phase
- Year two - building on what weve learned
- Consolidating the brand
- Planning for letting go
- Partnerships
- Confronting the myths
- Refining the messages, expanding the category
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29Frontline involvement
30Year two poster series
31expanded resources to sustain the improvement
- Flowing with the go
- Sustainability hand hygiene check map
- Action cards
- Point-of-care prompts
- New scripts
- Mythbusters
- A new poster series
32The Power of One
- A role for everyone in improvement
- Hand hygiene isnt the only factor. But its a
big - one. One in which there is a role for everyone to
play, - and where every individual has the power to make
a - difference.
- The core proposition, the message, is simple
- You are the agent for change.
- You can make a difference
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35Implementing in non-acute
- Huge diversity beyond acute
- Acute model not the right one
- Dedicated project to develop options
- Bespoke toolkits for different care settings
- Need to test and refine solutions
36Further informationwww.npsa.nhs.uk/cleanyourh
andsThankyou