Medical Research News

Nursing

sponsor
Become a Member Today!
Register
Email:


Password:

Remember me
Forgot your Password?
Invite Code?
Article ID

Your Article Summary

(Click the title below to leave the MDLinx Network and go to the Journal's Website)

Ott M et al. – Hand hygiene practice among health care workers is considered to be the single most effective method of preventing nosocomial infection in hospital settings. Infection control practices in psychiatric facilities are particularly challenging as hand hygiene protocols are specific to acute care facilities, areas where hands are visibly soiled, and when procedures are completed that may involve body fluid exposure. The inability to motivate and change the hand washing practices of health care workers suggests that hand washing behaviour is complex, involving individual beliefs and attitudes and institutional commitment and rigor.

Related Articles

Determinants of handwashing practices in Kenya: the role of media exposure, poverty and infrastructure
Tropical Medicine & International Health, 10/05/09    Relevance Score: 84%

Facemasks and Hand Hygiene to Prevent Influenza Transmission in Households
Annals of Internal Medicine, 10/07/09    Relevance Score: 77%

Today in Education/Training...keeping you current

Creating a Culture of Professional Development: A Milestone Pathway Tool for Registered Nurses
Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing, 11/25/09

The METER: A Brief, Self-Administered Measure of Health Literacy
Journal of General Internal Medicine, 11/25/09

The Effect of High-Fidelity Simulation Training on Medical-Surgical Graduate Nurses’ Perceived Ability to Respond to Patient Clinical Emergencies
Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing, 11/25/09

Article Search

Keyword:

Search:

Published within

Sort By:
Date
Relevance


Sponsor

Send this Summary to a Colleague

Enter email address