This document discusses the importance of hand hygiene for healthcare workers. It defines hand hygiene as cleaning hands with soap and water or alcohol-based hand rub to remove germs. Hand hygiene should be performed before and after touching patients, after body fluid exposure, and before and after clean procedures to protect patients and healthcare workers from harmful germs. The document describes different types of hand washing including social, clinical, and surgical hand scrubs. It provides guidelines on proper handwashing technique and emphasizes that hand hygiene is the most important way to prevent the spread of germs in healthcare settings and prevent hospital-acquired infections.
2. What is Hand Hygiene?
Hand Hygiene includes cleaning hands with soap
and water or alcohol-based hand rub in order to
remove germs, removing soil, dirt.
3. Why do we need to Hand Hygiene?
• Hand hygiene is the most important way to prevent the spread of
germs.
• Protect the patient against harmful germs carried on your hands or
present on his/her own skin
• Protect yourself and the health-care environment from harmful germs
• Prevent the incidence of hospital acquired infection.
20. How to handwash( 7 step method..!!!) who
To effectively
reduce the
growth of
germs on
hands,
handwashing
must last 40–60
secs
and should be
performed by
following all of
the illustrated
steps
24. Equipment
Warm running water
Antiseptic Soap Solution
Hand brush stored in a sterile
container
Sterile towel
25. Steps of the procedure
1.Makesure fingernails are short,clean,healthy.Nail polish
should be removed.
2.Remove jewelries(Rings, Bracelets).
3.Apply personal protective equipment(PPE) includes surgical shoe
covers,Cap,Facemask
and protective eyewear.
26. Surgical hand scrub (who 2009)
Start timing. Scrub each side of each finger, between the
fingers, and the back and front of the hand for 2 minutes.
Proceed to scrub the arms, keeping the hand higher than
the arm at all times. This helps to avoid recontamination
of the hands by water from the elbows and prevents
bacteria-laden soap and water from contaminating the
hands.
Wash each side of the arm from wrist to the elbow for 1
minute.
WHO Guidelines on Hand Hygiene in Health Care: First Global Patient
Safety Challenge Clean Care Is Safer Care.
Geneva: World Health Organization; 2009.
27. Repeat the process on the other hand and arm, keeping hands above
elbows at all times. If the hand touches anything at any time, the scrub
must be lengthened by 1 minute for the area that has been
contaminated.
Rinse hands and arms by passing them through the water in one
direction only, from fingertips to elbow. Do not move the arm back and
forth through the water.
Proceed to the operating theatre holding hands above elbows.
At all times during the scrub procedure, care should be taken not to
splash water onto surgical attire.
Once in the operating theatre, hands and arms should be dried using a
sterile towel and aseptic technique before donning gown and gloves.
30. “Handy” Tips
1 Artificial nails, gel nails or extenders are not to be worn
2 Contaminated surfaces or objects should not be touched after performing
hand hygiene.
3 Avoid touching your face, especially your eyes and nose.
4 Fingernails should be kept short
5 Do not “top up” a partially-used hand hygiene product dispenser.
6 If re-usable dispensers are used they must be emptied, washed and dried
prior to being refilled. Hand lotion bottles must not be re-used.
7 Wearing hand and wrist jewelry is not recommended