
How to Use an Alcohol-Based Handrub
Hand hygiene is the single most important action that can help
reduce the spread of infection in hospitals. However, some 2 million
healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) occur each year accounting for nearly
90,000 deaths annually. Approximately one-third of these infections may be
prevented by good hand hygiene on the part of healthcare workers. Other causes
of HAIs may include housekeeping practices, more acutely ill patient
populations, and antimicrobial resistance, etc. Current literature documents
unacceptably low levels of hand hygiene among healthcare workers —
approximately 40 percent to 50 percent.
Q: What are the most common reasons
for healthcare workers’ lack of compliance with handwashing?
A: There are a number of reasons that
impact healthcare workers compliance to handwashing:
- Lack of easy accessibility to sinks
- Handwashing causes
dry, irritated hands
- HCWs are too busy
- Handwashing takes too much time
- Lack of knowledge on when hand hygiene should take place, including casual
contact, before and after gloving, etc.
Q: How can hand sanitizers supplement
proper hand hygiene?
A: Designed to promote new strategies
for improving hand hygiene practices based on scientific data and evidence, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a revised Guideline for
Hand Hygiene in Healthcare Settings which authorizes the use of alcohol-based
hand sanitizers as the preferred method of hand hygiene; that is, superior to
soap-and-water washing when hands are not visibly soiled. The CDC legitimated
alcohol-based hand sanitizers because it recognized that the efficacy of alcohol
sanitizers was greater than soap and water, that the requirement of traditional
soap-and-water handwashing was difficult during a busy hospital day, and that
healthcare workers were more likely to use hand sanitizers which are accessible,
fast, and more gentle on hands.
Alcohol can prevent the transfer of healthcare-associated
pathogens, according to the CDC. In one study, gram-negative bacilli were
transferred from a colonized patient’s skin to a piece of catheter material
via the hands of nurses in only 17 percent of experiments after using an
antiseptic handrub with an alcohol-based hand rinse. In contrast, transfer of the
organisms occurred in 92 percent of experiments after handwashing with plain
soap and water. This experimental model indicates that when the hands of
healthcare workers are heavily contaminated, an antiseptic handrub using an
alcohol-based rinse can prevent pathogen transmission more effectively than can
handwashing with plain soap and water.
Alcohol-based products also are more effective for standard
handwashing or hand antisepsis by healthcare workers than soap or antimicrobial
soaps, according to the CDC. In all but two of the trials that compared
alcohol-based solutions with antimicrobial soaps or detergents, alcohol reduced
bacterial counts on hands more than washing hands with soaps or detergents
containing hexachlorophene, povidone-iodine, 4 percent chlorhexidine, or
triclosan.
In studies examining antimicrobial-resistant organisms,
alcohol-based products reduced the number of multi-drug-resistant pathogens
recovered from the hands of healthcare workers more effectively than did
handwashing with soap and water.
Q: How do hand sanitizers fit into a
busy healthcare worker’s handhygiene regimen?
A: Sanitizers are easily accessible —
at the bed side, at the doorway, or as personal carriage. They are fast-acting,
killing germs in as little as 15 seconds.
Q: What are the most pervasive
misconceptions related to the CDC’s hand-hygiene guidelines related to alcohol
handrubs and why?
A: HCWS think that since sanitizers are
alcohol-based, they are drying to hands when in fact, the opposite is true.
Alcohol-based hand sanitizers are less drying and irritating to hands than soap
and water. Sanitizers contain emollients to moisturize hands, whereas soaps
commonly remove the moisture from the skin. According to the CDC, in several
recent prospective trials, alcohol-based rinses or gels containing emollients
caused substantially less skin irritation and dryness than the soaps or
antimicrobial detergents tested.
Q: How is an alcohol-based hand
sanitizer best used?
A: When using an alcohol-based handrub,
apply a dime-sized amount of product into the palm of one hand and rub hands
together, covering all surfaces of hands and fingers, until hands are dry. This
usually takes 15 seconds or less.
Q: Why is an alcohol-based hand
sanitizer a great way to boost residual kill rates/times?
A: According to data first published in Hospital
Epidemiology and Infection Control, 2nd Edition (1999)
and contained in the CDC’s hand-hygiene guidelines, alcohol-based handrubs are
better than handwashing at killing bacteria. Numerous studies have documented
the in vivo antimicrobial activity of alcohols, as they effectively reduce
bacterial counts on the hands. Typically, log reductions of the release of test
bacteria from artificially contaminated hands average 3.5 log10 after a
30-second application and 4.0 to 5.0 log10 after a one-minute application. In
1994, the FDA TFM classified ethanol 60 percent to 95 percent as a Category I
agent (i.e., generally safe and effective for use in antiseptic handwash or
healthcare worker handwash products). Alcohols are rapidly germicidal when
applied to the skin, but they have no appreciable persistent (i.e., residual)
activity. However, regrowth of bacteria on the skin occurs slowly after use of
alcoholbased hand antiseptics, presumably because of the sub-lethal effect
alcohols have on some of the skin bacteria, according to the CDC. Alcohols, when
used in concentrations present in alcohol- based handrubs, also have in vivo
activity against several nonenveloped viruses. For example, 70 percent
isopropanol and 70 percent ethanol are more effective than medicated soap or
non-medicated soap in reducing rotavirus titers on fingerpads.
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