System Failure versus Personal Accountability — The Case for Clean Hands
- 13 July 2006
- journal article
- editorial
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 355 (2) , 121-123
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmp068118
Abstract
A new mother sits by her tiny, premature baby in a neonatal intensive care unit. She watches as a physician touches the baby without first washing his hands or using the waterless, alcohol-based hand antiseptic just a couple of feet away. A few minutes later, a nurse and then another doctor also fail to perform these basic procedures. When her baby was admitted to the unit, the mother was told to remind caregivers to wash their hands, but only after witnessing repeated failures does she muster the courage to speak up about the practice she thought would be routine. By then, her baby has acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) — probably transported on the hands of a caregiver who had been examining other babies who are colonized with MRSA. A few days later, MRSA invades the baby's bloodstream; it eventually proves fatal. Such preventable infections, caused by the failure to practice hand hygiene, are far from rare, and they occur in many of the finest neonatal intensive care units in the United States.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of Role Models and Hospital Design on the Hand Hygiene of Health-Care WorkersEmerging Infectious Diseases, 2003
- Compliance with Handwashing in a Teaching HospitalAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1999