Background: Effective hand hygiene prevents healthcare-associated infections. This systematic review evaluates the evidence for the World Health Organization's (WHO) technique in reducing the microbial load on the hands of healthcare workers (HCWs). Methods: This study was conducted in accordance with Joanna Briggs Protocol 531. Index and free-text terms for technique, HCW, and microbial load were searched in CINAHL, Medline, Web of Science, Mednar, Proquest, and Google Scholar. Inclusion criteria were articles in English that evaluated the WHO 6-step hand hygiene technique for healthcare staff. Two reviewers independently performed quality assessment and data extraction. Results: All 7 studies found that the WHO technique reduce...
Abstract Objective To evaluate the relative efficacy of the World Health Organization 2005 campaign ...
peer-reviewedBackground: There is general consensus that hand hygiene is the most effective way to ...
Healthcare-associated infection is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Hand hygiene is regarde...
Background: Effective hand hygiene prevents healthcare-associated infections. This systematic review...
Background: This review, commissioned by the World Health Organization (WHO), examined the effectiv...
Background: Nosocomial pathogens may be acquired by patients via their own unclean hands, but there ...
Introduction: Hand hygiene, the most effective and economical way to prevent the transmission of ma...
Objective To synthesize the existing evidence base of systematic reviews of interventions to improve...
This paper discusses the evidence of hand hygiene (mainly hygienic hand antisepsis) in reducing infe...
Background: Human hands are home to thousands of microorganisms, which may be transmitted to surface...
Background. Because our hands are the most common mode of transmission for bacteria causing hospital...
Abstract Background Healthcare worker hand hygiene is...
Background: The effectiveness of hand rubbing with alcohol-based handrub (ABHR) is impacted by sev...
Objective: To synthesize the existing evidence base of systematic reviews of interventions to imp...
Background: Extensive data suggests that hand hygiene is a critical intervention for reducing infect...
Abstract Objective To evaluate the relative efficacy of the World Health Organization 2005 campaign ...
peer-reviewedBackground: There is general consensus that hand hygiene is the most effective way to ...
Healthcare-associated infection is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Hand hygiene is regarde...
Background: Effective hand hygiene prevents healthcare-associated infections. This systematic review...
Background: This review, commissioned by the World Health Organization (WHO), examined the effectiv...
Background: Nosocomial pathogens may be acquired by patients via their own unclean hands, but there ...
Introduction: Hand hygiene, the most effective and economical way to prevent the transmission of ma...
Objective To synthesize the existing evidence base of systematic reviews of interventions to improve...
This paper discusses the evidence of hand hygiene (mainly hygienic hand antisepsis) in reducing infe...
Background: Human hands are home to thousands of microorganisms, which may be transmitted to surface...
Background. Because our hands are the most common mode of transmission for bacteria causing hospital...
Abstract Background Healthcare worker hand hygiene is...
Background: The effectiveness of hand rubbing with alcohol-based handrub (ABHR) is impacted by sev...
Objective: To synthesize the existing evidence base of systematic reviews of interventions to imp...
Background: Extensive data suggests that hand hygiene is a critical intervention for reducing infect...
Abstract Objective To evaluate the relative efficacy of the World Health Organization 2005 campaign ...
peer-reviewedBackground: There is general consensus that hand hygiene is the most effective way to ...
Healthcare-associated infection is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Hand hygiene is regarde...