| 05 Mai 2014
GENEVA  ¦ 2 May 2014 -- On Hand Hygiene Day (5 May), the World Health  Organization (WHO) urges health workers to practice good hand hygiene  when caring for patients, to protect them from contracting infections in  health  facilities. Initial results from a new WHO global survey  confirm that these infections are often resistant to the antibiotics  used to treat them [AB1] .
 
 Healthcare-associated infections usually occur when germs are  transferred by healthcare providers’ hands touching the patient. Of  every 100 hospitalized patients, at least 7 in high-income and 10 in  low-/middle-income countries will acquire a healthcare-associated  infection. Among critically ill and vulnerable patients in intensive  care units, that figure rises to around 30 per 100[AB2] .  Every year, hundreds of millions of patients around the world are  affected by healthcare-associated infections, a high proportion of which  is caused by germs that are resistant to antimicrobial drugs.
 
 When patients are infected with germs that do not respond well to  antibiotics, they generally have worse clinical outcomes, cost more to  treat and are more likely to die than other patients.
 
 Earlier this week, WHO issued a major global report on antimicrobial  resistance documenting high rates of resistance in bacteria that cause  common infections (e.g. urinary tract infection, surgical site  infections, pneumonia and bloodstream infections) in all regions of the world[thomasg3].
 
 The initial results of the global survey confirm that resistance is very  frequent in bacteria isolated in health-care facilities; for instance,  for a devastating bug called Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), it is as high as 44%, 40% and 38% on average in Latin America, West African countries, and Europe respectively.  
 
 “There is clear scientific evidence that good hand hygiene by health  workers reduces healthcare-associated infections caused by resistant  germs, in particular by MRSA,”[AB4] says Professor Benedetta Allegranzi, technical lead of the WHO Clean  Care is Safer Care programme and of the activities planned for Hand  Hygiene Day.  
 
 Health workers can play a vital role to protect patients from infections  that are difficult to treat by performing hand hygiene at 5 key  moments, preferably by using an alcohol-based rub or by hand washing  with soap and water if hands are visibly dirty.
 
 The ‘5 Moments’ for hand hygiene are:
- before touching a patient
 - before clean and aseptic procedures (e.g. Inserting devices such as catheters)
 - after contact with body fluids
 - after touching a patient
 - after touching patient surroundings.
 
 The  use of alcohol-based hand rub products is a key factor to achieve  improvement because they can be promptly used at the point of care when  hand hygiene is needed to ensure patient safety and they have higher  antimicrobial effect than soap and water.
 “Although the development of new antibiotics is vital to provide new  treatment options, strengthening hand hygiene and other infection  control best practices has the potential to stop antimicrobial  resistance. Preventing the transmission and spread of the germs, avoids  infections and the related treatment constraints and patient suffering,”  says Dr. Edward Kelley, Director, Service Delivery and Safety which  hosts the Clean Care is Safer Care programme.
 
 For this year’s “SAVE LIVES: Clean Your Hands” Campaign, the Call to  Action is “No action today; no cure tomorrow – make sure the WHO ‘5  Moments’ are part of protecting your patients from resistant germs.”  Under this year’s Campaign, more than 1100 health facilities have  registered, committing to practice good hand hygiene, joining more than  16,000 health facilities in 168 countries that have committed in  previous years.
 
 “This continuous increase of participation shows that hand hygiene  efforts continue to be prioritized and sustained worldwide, especially  when combined with other important goals such as combating antimicrobial  resistance,” says Professor Didier Pittet, Director of the WHO  Collaborating Centre on Patient Safety (Infection Control) at the  University of Geneva Hospitals.
 
 Through the SAVE LIVES: Clean Your Hands campaign, WHO will continue to  work with countries to highlight the issue of antimicrobial resistance  and to promote the role that hand hygiene can play in preventing the  spread of resistant germs. Final results of the surveys[thomasg5] mentioned will be updated as more data is processed. This will allow  reacting with further actions in the field of infection prevention and  control, surveillance, antibiotic use optimization, and the prevention  of surgical site infections.









