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Gap analysis of infection control practices in low- and middle-income countries
Authors
K. Weinshel Dramowski, A. Hajdu, Á. Jacob, S. Khanal, B. Zoltán, M. Mougkou, K. Phukan, C. Staneloni, M.I. Singh, N.
Publication date
1 January 2015
Publisher
Abstract
background. Healthcare-associated infection rates are higher in low- and middle-income countries compared with high-income countries, resulting in relatively larger incidence of patient mortality and disability and additional healthcare costs. objective. To use the Infection Control Assessment Tool to assess gaps in infection control (IC) practices in the participating countries. methods. Six international sites located in Argentina, Greece, Hungary, India, Nepal, and South Africa provided information on the health facility and the surgical modules relating to IC programs, surgical antibiotic use and surgical equipment procedures, surgical area practices, sterilization and disinfection of equipment and intravenous fluid, and hand hygiene. Modules were scored for each country. results. The 6 international sites completed 5 modules. Of 121 completed sections, scores of less than 50% of the recommended IC practices were received in 23 (19%) and scores from 50% to 75% were received in 43 (36%). IC programs had various limitations in many sites and surveillance of healthcare-associated infections was not consistently performed. Lack of administration of perioperative antibiotics, inadequate sterilization and disinfection of equipment, and paucity of hand hygiene were found even in a high-income country. There was also a lack of clearly written defined policies and procedures across many facilities. conclusions. Our results indicate that adherence to recommended IC practices is suboptimal. Opportunities for improvement of IC practices exist in several areas, including hospital-wide IC programs and surveillance, antibiotic stewardship, written and posted guidelines and policies across a range of topics, surgical instrument sterilization procedures, and improved hand hygiene. © 2015 by The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America. All rights reserved
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Last time updated on 10/02/2023