One in five surgeons do not wash hands after visiting a toilet - an ethnographic field study

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One in five surgeons do not wash hands after visiting a toilet - an ethnographic field study. / Burcharth, Jakob; Pommergaard, Hans Christian; Alamili, Mahdi; Danielsen, Anne Kjærgaard; Rosenberg, Jacob.

In: Ugeskrift for Laeger, Vol. 176, No. 50, 08.12.2014.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Burcharth, J, Pommergaard, HC, Alamili, M, Danielsen, AK & Rosenberg, J 2014, 'One in five surgeons do not wash hands after visiting a toilet - an ethnographic field study', Ugeskrift for Laeger, vol. 176, no. 50.

APA

Burcharth, J., Pommergaard, H. C., Alamili, M., Danielsen, A. K., & Rosenberg, J. (2014). One in five surgeons do not wash hands after visiting a toilet - an ethnographic field study. Ugeskrift for Laeger, 176(50).

Vancouver

Burcharth J, Pommergaard HC, Alamili M, Danielsen AK, Rosenberg J. One in five surgeons do not wash hands after visiting a toilet - an ethnographic field study. Ugeskrift for Laeger. 2014 Dec 8;176(50).

Author

Burcharth, Jakob ; Pommergaard, Hans Christian ; Alamili, Mahdi ; Danielsen, Anne Kjærgaard ; Rosenberg, Jacob. / One in five surgeons do not wash hands after visiting a toilet - an ethnographic field study. In: Ugeskrift for Laeger. 2014 ; Vol. 176, No. 50.

Bibtex

@article{cd4daad156364cda9a80ef07a304911b,
title = "One in five surgeons do not wash hands after visiting a toilet - an ethnographic field study",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: Non-compliance with regard to hand hygiene is a major problem in the health-care system especially among surgeons and anaesthetists. The purpose of this study was to examine the hand hygiene routines after toilet visits among participants attending an international surgical congress.METHODS: An observational study was conducted at the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2012 and at the American Medical Writers Association (AMWA) Congress 2012 as comparison. The study was performed as an ethnographic field study. A standardized observational matrix was developed for observing whether hand washing (as a surrogate measure of hand hygiene) was performed after toilet visits by observers. Frequencies were compared using Fisher's exact test.RESULTS: A total of 100 persons were observed (80% males). Of the 50 males observed at the ACS meeting, ten males did not use hand hygiene in relation to toilet visits (20%), while only one person at the AMWA meeting out of the 50 observed did not use hand hygiene (2%), p = 0.008. At both congresses only males did not use hand hygiene in relation to toilet visits.CONCLUSION: One in five surgeons did not wash hands after visiting a toilet. Even though the observed surgeons were not observed in an operating theatre or in a setting that required a distinct degree of hand hygiene, it does reveal a worrying behaviour. It is not known whether this was a conscious act, the result of business, or if it was due to lack of knowledge about the effects of hand hygiene on bacterial transmission.FUNDING: not relevant.TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study was neither registered at the National Committee of Health Research nor at Clinical Trials since it did not meet the requirements of registration.",
author = "Jakob Burcharth and Pommergaard, {Hans Christian} and Mahdi Alamili and Danielsen, {Anne Kj{\ae}rgaard} and Jacob Rosenberg",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
day = "8",
language = "English",
volume = "176",
journal = "Ugeskrift for Laeger",
issn = "0041-5782",
publisher = "Almindelige Danske Laegeforening",
number = "50",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - One in five surgeons do not wash hands after visiting a toilet - an ethnographic field study

AU - Burcharth, Jakob

AU - Pommergaard, Hans Christian

AU - Alamili, Mahdi

AU - Danielsen, Anne Kjærgaard

AU - Rosenberg, Jacob

PY - 2014/12/8

Y1 - 2014/12/8

N2 - INTRODUCTION: Non-compliance with regard to hand hygiene is a major problem in the health-care system especially among surgeons and anaesthetists. The purpose of this study was to examine the hand hygiene routines after toilet visits among participants attending an international surgical congress.METHODS: An observational study was conducted at the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2012 and at the American Medical Writers Association (AMWA) Congress 2012 as comparison. The study was performed as an ethnographic field study. A standardized observational matrix was developed for observing whether hand washing (as a surrogate measure of hand hygiene) was performed after toilet visits by observers. Frequencies were compared using Fisher's exact test.RESULTS: A total of 100 persons were observed (80% males). Of the 50 males observed at the ACS meeting, ten males did not use hand hygiene in relation to toilet visits (20%), while only one person at the AMWA meeting out of the 50 observed did not use hand hygiene (2%), p = 0.008. At both congresses only males did not use hand hygiene in relation to toilet visits.CONCLUSION: One in five surgeons did not wash hands after visiting a toilet. Even though the observed surgeons were not observed in an operating theatre or in a setting that required a distinct degree of hand hygiene, it does reveal a worrying behaviour. It is not known whether this was a conscious act, the result of business, or if it was due to lack of knowledge about the effects of hand hygiene on bacterial transmission.FUNDING: not relevant.TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study was neither registered at the National Committee of Health Research nor at Clinical Trials since it did not meet the requirements of registration.

AB - INTRODUCTION: Non-compliance with regard to hand hygiene is a major problem in the health-care system especially among surgeons and anaesthetists. The purpose of this study was to examine the hand hygiene routines after toilet visits among participants attending an international surgical congress.METHODS: An observational study was conducted at the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2012 and at the American Medical Writers Association (AMWA) Congress 2012 as comparison. The study was performed as an ethnographic field study. A standardized observational matrix was developed for observing whether hand washing (as a surrogate measure of hand hygiene) was performed after toilet visits by observers. Frequencies were compared using Fisher's exact test.RESULTS: A total of 100 persons were observed (80% males). Of the 50 males observed at the ACS meeting, ten males did not use hand hygiene in relation to toilet visits (20%), while only one person at the AMWA meeting out of the 50 observed did not use hand hygiene (2%), p = 0.008. At both congresses only males did not use hand hygiene in relation to toilet visits.CONCLUSION: One in five surgeons did not wash hands after visiting a toilet. Even though the observed surgeons were not observed in an operating theatre or in a setting that required a distinct degree of hand hygiene, it does reveal a worrying behaviour. It is not known whether this was a conscious act, the result of business, or if it was due to lack of knowledge about the effects of hand hygiene on bacterial transmission.FUNDING: not relevant.TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study was neither registered at the National Committee of Health Research nor at Clinical Trials since it did not meet the requirements of registration.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85041999066&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25498174

AN - SCOPUS:85041999066

VL - 176

JO - Ugeskrift for Laeger

JF - Ugeskrift for Laeger

SN - 0041-5782

IS - 50

ER -

ID: 284004848