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Making infection prevention and control everyone's business? Hospital staff views on patient involvement.

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posted on 2019-05-24, 14:27 authored by Elizabeth Sutton, Liz Brewster, Carolyn Tarrant
CONTEXT: Ensuring an infection-free environment is increasingly seen as requiring the contribution of staff, patients and visitors. There is limited evidence, however, about how staff feel about collaborating with patients and relatives to co-produce that environment. AIMS: This study aims to understand how hospital staff perceive the involvement of patients and relatives in infection prevention and control (IPC) and the main challenges for staff in working together with patients and relatives to reduce the threat of infection. METHODS: Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 35 frontline health-care professionals and four executive staff, from two hospital trusts. FINDINGS: We found that staff were more supportive of approaches that encourage co-operation from patients and relatives, than of interventions that invoked confrontation. We identified challenges to involvement arising from staff concerns about shifting responsibility for IPC onto patients. Staff were not always able to work with patients to control infection risks as some patients themselves created and perpetuated those risks. CONCLUSIONS: Our work highlights that IPC has particular features that impact on the possibilities for involving patients and relatives at the point of care. Staff acknowledge tensions between the drive to involve patients and respect their autonomy, and their duty to protect patients from risk of unseen harm. The role that patients and relatives can play in IPC is fluctuating and context dependent. Staff responsibility for protecting patients from the risk of infection may sometimes need to take priority over prerogatives to involve patients and relatives in the co-production of IPC.

Funding

This study was funded by the Health Foundation, Charity Number 286967. LB was supported by Mary Dixon‐Woods’ Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award (WT097899).

History

Citation

Health Expectations, 2019

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Health Expectations

Publisher

Wiley

eissn

1369-7625

Acceptance date

2019-01-21

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-05-24

Publisher version

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/hex.12874

Notes

Additional supporting information may be found online in the Supporting Information section at the end of the article.

Language

en

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