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How to Convince People and Get Adherence to Hand Hygiene Practices? The Success of Ozires, the Humanoid Robot!

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2020

Braulio Couto
Affiliation:
Centro Universitário de Belo Horizonte – UniBH
Amanda Machado
Affiliation:
Centro Universitário de Belo Horizonte – UniBH
Ana Clara Barbosa
Affiliation:
Centro Universitário de Belo Horizonte – UniBH
Bruna Mendes
Affiliation:
Centro Universitário de Belo Horizonte – UniBH
Maria da Glória Nogueira
Affiliation:
Biocor Instituto
Maria Luiza Peixoto
Affiliation:
Biocor Instituto Thaís Milene dos Santos, Biocor Instituto
André Alvim
Affiliation:
Centro Universitário UNA
Jeruza Romaniello
Affiliation:
Hospital Evangélico
Adriana Alves
Affiliation:
Hospital Evangélico
Bruno Batista
Affiliation:
Hospital Evangélico
Luciana Covello
Affiliation:
Hospital Evangélico
Carlos Starling
Affiliation:
Vera Cruz Hospital
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Abstract

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Background: Our team has been fighting nosocomial infections since 1991. During our journey, we often ask why people do not wash their hands! Semmelweiss discovered in the 1840s that handwashing prevented deaths from puerperal sepsis, but we still need to convince healthcare workers about hand hygiene. One answer is that washing hands is an unsophisticated gesture, without any technology, so people just do not do it. How can we improve compliance with hand hygiene? We imagined a robot in our team to remind people to wash their hands. Then, in 2016 we met Meccanoid, a US$200 toy robot: a 4-foot-tall programmable humanoid robot with voice recognition capabilities. We made adaptions in the robot (mini-projector + audio amplifier + alcohol dispenser + spy camera), and we gave him a name (Ozires) and a purpose: He became a professor who teaches healthcare workers how, when, and why wash their hands! Here, we describe the multimodal strategy centered around Ozires. Methods: The multimodal strategy consists of 7 key elements: (1) the robot, accompanied by a infection control practitioner, performs audio and video lectures about hand hygiene techniques, motivational videos, data feedback; (2) the robot’s wood copies with sound alert with motion detector for hand hygiene are spread out in the whole hospital; (3) fridge magnet with robot prints (gifts for patients and healthcare professionals); (4) app for hand hygiene monitoring (Hands Clean); (5) adherence rates by professional category and individual feedback; (6) patient empowerment for hand hygiene; and (7) sound alert for hand hygiene in the patient room’s door. Results: After the insertion of Ozires in 3 ICUs of hospital A (pilot study), the hand hygiene (HH) rate increased from ~36%, between January and July 2016, to ~68% between August 2016 and October 2019. At hospital B, Ozires started his lectures in May 2018, throughout the hospital. Hand hygiene adherence increased from 23% between July and December 2017 to 60% between June 2018 and October 2019. In the 3 months before this multimodal strategy was implemented in hospital C (June–August 2019), and the mean rate of hand hygiene was 65%. With the robot, the hand hygiene rate increased to 94% (September–October 2019). Conclusions: The multimodal strategy centered around the robot Ozires works! Hand hygiene compliance increased significantly after the interventions. People listen the robot much more attentively than to their human colleagues, and healthcare worker behavior changed! We need to go further improve the program, but it is sustainable. Finally, we succeeded in convincing people to improve their hand hygiene practices.

Funding: None

Disclosures: None

Type
Poster Presentations
Copyright
© 2020 by The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America. All rights reserved.