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Sökning: WFRF:(Blomgren Per Ola)

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1.
  • Blomgren, Per-Ola (författare)
  • Clean work, the pursuit of increased adherence to hand hygiene routines : a descriptive study
  • 2022
  • Licentiatavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Healthcare-associated infections (HAI) are a problem in health care worldwide. In Sweden 7-8% of all patients treated in hospital suffer from an adverse event of varying severity, of which approximately 60,000 from a HAI. Proper hand hygiene is considered the single most important measure to reduce HAI. Despite the importance, adherence to correct hand hygiene routines are lacking among healthcare workers (HCWs). The World Health Organizations (WHO) multimodal promotion strategy promotes areas that need to be addressed in order to change the behaviour of individual HCWs to optimise adherence to hand hygiene and to improve patient safety. These areas include feedback, education, reminders at the workplace and institutional safety climate. The overall aim of this study was to examine the possibility of adherence to hand hygiene routines and to explore factors that might influence the HCWs adherence. The study used a descriptive research design made through qualitative method, with focus group interviews, and quantitative method, using a questionnaire survey. Eight focus group interviews were conducted with assistant nurses (n=18), nurses (n=15) and physicians (n=5) and analysed with abductive qualitative content analysis. The questionnaire survey was answered by nurses (n=84) and nursing students in their first semester (n=71) and last semester (n=46) and the data was statistically analysed.The main findings show that there are barriers to hand hygiene adherence and measures to improve these. HCWs highlighted discrepancies regarding how the organisation was supposed to give feedback and how it actually was at the workplace and expressed needs for more direct feedback to improve adherence. The study also found that hygienic knowledge gaps exists among nurses and nursing students regarding causes of HAI and how the risk of contamination of patients and HCWs can be minimized among others. Students at the beginning of the education had a lower level of knowledge than last semester students and registered nurses. The last semester students tended to have the highest level of hand hygiene knowledge. In conclusion, the key areas presented by WHO’s multimodal promotion strategy to improve adherence all lack the appropriate measures, in some extent. The use of an electronic reminder system could give the means to improve a behaviour as long as the individual integrity is protected and development of curriculums for nursing students and continuing education of nurses is needed to further develop and maintaining knowledge.
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2.
  • Blomgren, Per-Ola, 1986-, et al. (författare)
  • Hand hygiene knowledge among nurses and nursing students : a descriptive cross-sectional comparative survey using the WHO's "Hand Hygiene Knowledge Questionnaire"
  • 2024
  • Ingår i: Infection Prevention in Practice. - : Elsevier. - 2590-0889. ; 6:2
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • AimTo determine the level of knowledge and explore the difference of hand hygiene between nursing students and nurses.BackgroundAnnually, 3.8 million people in Europe acquire healthcare-associated infections, highlighting the importance of hand hygiene. Despite WHO's emphasis on the fact that greater hand hygiene knowledge correlates with improved hand hygiene compliance, several studies have shown knowledge gaps among nurses and nursing students regarding hand hygiene.DesignDescriptive cross-sectional comparative survey.MethodsA version of the WHO “Hand Hygiene Knowledge Questionnaire”, translated into Swedish, was used for data collection among nursing students in the first and last semester, and registered nurses from a university and associated hospital. Data were analyzed by descriptive statistics, and comparison between groups with Fisher's exact test, one-way ANOVA, and post-hoc tests (Pairwise Z-Tests, Tukey HSD).ResultsThe survey, conducted between December 2020 and January 2021, received responses from 201 participants, including 71 first semester students, 46 last semester students and 84 registered nurses, showing moderate (55.7% [50–74% correct answers]) to good (43.8% [75–100% correct answers]) knowledge levels. First-semester students scored lower (17.0 ± 2.1) than last-semester students (18.8 ± 1.8) and registered nurses (18.3 ± 2.1) out of 25 questions.DiscussionIt is necessary for all groups to receive proper education on hand hygiene knowledge and to have an educational program that does not separate the groups but combines them with continuing education, since the students will someday be influencing future hand hygiene knowledge as a peer, together with the nurse.
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3.
  • Blomgren, Per-Ola, et al. (författare)
  • Healthcare workers' perceptions and acceptance of an electronic reminder system for hand hygiene
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: Journal of Hospital Infection. - : Elsevier. - 0195-6701 .- 1532-2939. ; 108, s. 197-204
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Background:Healthcare-associated infections (HCAIs) have a large negative impact onmorbidity, mortality, and quality of life. Approximately 9% of all patients hospitalized inSweden suffer from HCAI. Hand hygiene plays a key role and is considered the single mostimportant measure to reduce HCAI. The hospital organization works actively to reduceHCAI. Implementing electronic systems to remind and/or notify healthcare workers raisesawareness of and adherence to hand hygiene. However, there is a paucity of studiesaddressing individuals’ perceptions of having such a system and how the organizationworks.Aim:To investigate healthcare workers’ perceptions of infection prevention in thehealthcare organization and perceptions and acceptance of an electronic reminder systemthat encourages good hand hygiene.Methods:Qualitative descriptive design with data collected in eight focus group inter-views including assistant nurses, nurses, and physicians (N¼38). Content analysis wasapplied and data were related to the Theory of Planned Behaviour.Findings:Healthcare workers perceive lack of feedback from the hospital organizationand are positive towards an electronic reminder system to increase adherence to handhygiene. The electronic reminder system should not register data at an individual levelsince it could be used as an instrument for control by the management that could bestressful for staff.Conclusion:In general, there is positive acceptance of the electronic reminder system,and the respondents perceived it as having the ability to change behaviour. However, theconcept has to be further developed to protect the individual’s integrity and needs to beused with feedback on a group level
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