1 research outputs found
WHO research agenda on the role of the institutional safety climate for hand hygiene improvement : a Delphi consensus-building study
Background: Creating and sustaining an institutional
climate conducive to patient and health worker safety
is a critical element of successful multimodal hand
hygiene improvement strategies aimed at achieving best
practices. Repeated WHO global surveys indicate that the
institutional safety climate consistently ranks the lowest
among various interventions.Methods: To develop an international expert consensus
on research agenda priorities related to the role of
institutional safety climate within the context of a
multimodal hand hygiene improvement strategy, we
conducted a structured consensus process involving a
purposive sample of international experts. A preliminary
list of research priorities was formulated following
evidence mapping, and subsequently refined through
a modified Delphi consensus process involving two
rounds. In round 1, survey respondents were asked to
rate the importance of each research priority. In round 2,
experts reviewed round 1 ratings to reach a consensus
(defined as ≥70% agreement) on the final prioritised
items to be included in the research agenda. The research
priorities were then reviewed and finalised by members
of the WHO Technical Advisory Group on Hand Hygiene
Research in Healthcare.Results: Of the 57 invited participants, 50 completed
Delphi round 1 (88%), and 48 completed round 2 (96%).
Thirty-six research priority statements were included
in round 1 across five thematic categories: (1) safety
climate; (2) personal accountability for hand hygiene; (3)
leadership; (4) patient participation and empowerment
and (5) religion and traditions. In round 1, 75% of the
items achieved consensus, with 9 statements carried
forward to round 2, leading to a final set of 31 prioritised
research statements.Conclusion: This research agenda can be used by
researchers, clinicians, policy-makers and funding bodies
to address gaps in hand hygiene improvement within
the context of an institutional safety climate, thereby
enhancing patient and health worker safety globally.peer-reviewe