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Nursing Quality Indicators

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Abstract The National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators were published in an effort to build on previously collected quality data and further develop nursing knowledge to provide best practice nursing care. This paper explores eight scholarly articles that report on the relationship between hand hygiene compliance and the nursing-sensitive indicator of nosocomial infections. These items will be reviewed; a needs assessment, high reliability standards, just culture principals, quality improvement implications, a plan for future action using the Plan-Do-Study-Act model, and summarization of ethical implications. Health care organizations must engage in robust process improvement for hand hygiene (HH) compliance for the resultant reduction …show more content…

These infections lead to the loss of tens of thousands of lives and cost the U.S. health care system billions of dollars each year (Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, n.d.). Mathematical models suggest that an increase in HH adherence from 60% to 80% could reduce the rates of infection by multidrug-resistant organisms by 8% (Cumbler et al., 2013). Despite the fact that HH represents the foundation of infection control, HH compliance remains a concern (Cumbler et al., 2013). Needs …show more content…

This aligns with the model of Plan-Do-Study-Act. It is crucial to understand what we are trying to accomplish, how we will know that a change is an improvement, and what changes can be made that will actually result in improvement. Prevention strategies of nosocomial infections related to poor hand hygiene include revision of: orientation, training processes, competency assessments, equipment cleaning, handwashing procedures, switching to the use of single-use IV flush vials, adding strategically located waterless hand rubs, defining supervisory expectations, conducting in-services, team trainings, and tracking systems (Infection control related sentinel events, 2003). Potential solutions to noncompliance include: consistent skin protectant application, reduced time required for handwashing, and antiseptic stations at the bedside and room entry points (Boyce, 1999). Hospital administrators must create an organizational atmosphere in which adherence to recommended HH practices are considered an integral part of providing high-quality care (Boyce, 1999). Improvement in infection control

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