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Outpatient Surgery E-Weekly

OR Excellence Pre-Registration Ends Wednesday

This Wednesday, Sept. 1, is your last chance to participate in Outpatient Surgery Magazine's OR Excellence 2010 Pre-Registration Contest. There's no...

Researchers Predict Anesthesiologist Shortage, CRNA Surplus

A recent analysis of the anesthesia labor market speculates that a current shortfall of providers across the surgical industry could widen in the ne...

A Change of Mind: Anesthesia, Consciousness and the Brain

The brain works through different processes as it transitions between conscious and unconscious states, a finding that bucks commonly held assumptio...

Home > News > June, 2009

Promoting Hand Hygiene With Hip-Hop

Boston hospital gets creative to boost handwashing compliance.

Rapping nurses, undercover agents and thousands of hand sanitizer dispensers: They’re all part of an aggressive campaign that has helped Massachusetts General Hospital boost its hand-washing compliance from about 30% 5 years ago to nearly 100% in some units of the facility today.

You can’t walk more than a few feet in the hospital without encountering a dispenser of hand sanitizer, says Judy Tarselli, RN. "There are literally thousands of dispensers in this hospital." But that doesn’t mean everyone uses them when they’re supposed to.

One nurse at Mass General came up with a creative way to spread the message about hand hygiene, producing a rap music video called the "Cal Stat Rap" (Cal Stat is the hand sanitizer used at the hospital). The video features nurses and patients rhyming and dancing as they demonstrate how and when to use the sanitizer.

Meanwhile, Ms. Tarselli takes on the role of undercover agent, roaming the halls of the hospital to check up on staff compliance with the hospital’s hand hygiene policy, which calls for using hand sanitizer or soap and water after every contact with a patient or any object near a patient, such as medical equipment or pagers.

Irene Tsikitas

Categories: Infection Control, News
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