Abstract

Hand hygiene practice in hospitals is unfortunately still widely insufficient, even though it is known that transmitting pathogens via hands is the leading cause of healthcare-associated infections. Previous research has shown that improving knowledge, providing feedback on past behaviour and targeting social norms are promising approaches to improve hand hygiene practices. The present field experiment was designed to direct people on when to perform hand hygiene and prevent forgetfulness. This intervention is the first to examine the effect of inducing injunctive social norms via an emoticon-based feedback system on hand hygiene behaviour. Electronic monitoring and feedback devices were installed in hospital patient rooms on top of hand-rub dispensers, next to the doorway, for a period of 17 weeks. In the emoticon condition, screens at the devices activated whenever a person entered or exited the room. Before using the alcohol-based hand-rub dispenser, a frowny face was displayed, indicating that hand hygiene should be performed. If the dispenser was subsequently used, this picture changed to a smiley face to positively reinforce the correct behaviour. Hand hygiene behaviour in the emoticon rooms significantly outperformed the behaviour in three other tested conditions. The strong effect in this field experiment indicates that activating injunctive norms may be a promising approach to improve hand hygiene behaviour. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed.

Highlights

  • Healthcare-associated infections are a rising threat to global health systems

  • The HHE ratio in the Screen-Emoticons group increased from 4.2% at baseline phase to 12.5% at intervention timepoint 1, which is almost a three-fold surge in hand hygiene behaviour

  • We explored if targeting social norms improves hand hygiene behaviour in a hospital

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare-associated infections are a rising threat to global health systems. Infections acquired while receiving healthcare can cause severe impairments to patients’ physical and mental health, increase death rates, and add massive costs to health systems [1,2]. Over four million patients suffer from healthcare-associated infections in Europe annually. Of these cases, approximately 37,000 patients die as a direct consequence [3].

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