1. Mobilising for safer care: addressing structural barriers to reducing healthcare-associated infections in Vancouver, Canada.
- Author
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Zuberi, Daniyal M., Ptashnick, Melita B., Collet, Jun Chen, Lau, Tim T.Y., Mirzanejad, Yazdan, and Thomas, Eva E.
- Subjects
CROSS infection prevention ,PREVENTIVE health services ,MEDICAL personnel ,ANTI-infective agents ,ALLIED health personnel ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,PREVENTION of communicable diseases ,HAND washing ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH facility administration ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL protocols ,PATIENT safety ,RESEARCH funding ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,STANDARDS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Programs and reforms to prevent healthcare-associated infections encounter structural barriers that affect their adoption and effective implementation. This article is based on interviews with 55 frontline healthcare providers, infection control and quality experts, and policymakers from 2010–2013 primarily in Vancouver, Canada. This article reports the perceptions of participants regarding the consequences that structural barriers, including physical structure, staffing levels, education, policy variations, and authority, have on their ability to prevent healthcare-associated infections. The findings suggest the need to shift more funding to preventative measures, such as more infection-prevention professionals, higher participation in quality programs and increased availability of isolation rooms to reduce healthcare-associated infections. In addition, leadership and resources are needed to expand (1) mandatory annual infection prevention education sessions to all hospital staff with point of care follow up, and (2) standardised, evidence-based antimicrobial stewardship clinical practice guidelines and policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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