Helping the NHS get better June 1st 2008 Supplying the correct types of soaps and hand towels wherever they are needed is
vitally important to healthcare hygiene, says Jenny Turner of Tork manufacturer SCA
Tissue Europe.She talks you through the various issues involved in equipping a
hospital washroom and how to tackle them
Most of us think in terms of respirators, trolleys and beds when
considering the type of equipment vital to the smooth
running of a hospital.
Few of us would put washroom dispensers, soaps and hand towels
in this "crucial"category. But as hospital-acquired infections continue
to hit the headlines, the job of keeping cross-contamination to a
minimum has become a matter of national importance.
Latest figures published by the Office for National Statistics in 2008
showed a steep increase in the number of deaths caused by
Clostridium Difficile, a common bacteria that becomes a problem
when illness or antibiotics upset the balance of the gut.
Deaths caused by hospital "superbug" MRSA stabilised at around
1,650 during the same period, but this figure still represents a massive
increase over the total of 51 recorded in 1993 when reporting began.
Hand hygiene has become a key focus in the fight against hospitalacquired
infections as studies show that not all hospital staff wash and
dry their hands as frequently, efficiently or as thoroughly as they
should.
Supplying the right facilities in a user-friendly environment is a
simple yet effective way of improving people's hand hygiene regimes.
Hospital washrooms need to cater for a wide range of people
including surgeons,doctors, nursing staff,patients and visitors. Each
facility needs to be adapted to reflect its individual role, but some key
rules apply to all hospital washrooms.
The most important point is of course to prevent crosscontamination
at all costs.There should be as few doors as possible to
avoid handles and fixtures being contaminated, and hand towel
dispensers should self present one towel at a time to ensure that each
towel is touched only by the user.
In the washrooms on an intensive care ward, hand towels should be
particularly soft so that handwashing and drying can be carried out
frequently without causing discomfort.
Soaps in intensive care wards should be mild and unperfumed, and
alcohol wipes should be supplied to provide an antibacterial function
to complement the washing process.
Tork Premium Interfold towels are particularly suitable for such
hygiene-critical healthcare washrooms.The towels are available in soft
and extra soft versions and their high absorbency will dry the hands
without causing chapping or soreness.They are also housed in a
dispenser with a hygiene shield to ensure that each towel is touched
only by the user.
Also for intensive care wards is Tork Premium liquid soap, available
in mild, unperfumed and antibacterial formulas.
On general wards for staff and patients, no-touch washroom
systems are still important.However, these washrooms are often busy
which means a high-volume, cost-effective system is required.
Controlled dispensing,pre-measured hand towel systems such as the
Tork hand towel roll are ideal here because they avoid waste and
reduce costs while again ensuring that each towel is touched only by
the user.
The Tork hand towel roll is available in an automatic,hands-free
dispenser for optimum hygiene as well as a semi-automatic version
that cuts the towel to size inside the dispenser.
In the visitor washrooms of a hospital a cost-effective, high volume
system is required but hygiene still needs to be addressed.Washrooms
in the A&E department are used by people who may be vomiting or
perhaps bleeding from open wounds.The fact that busy doctors and
nurses may sometimes use these washroom facilities themselves
means the potential for cross-contamination is extremely high.
Here Tork Advanced zigzag-fold towels are particularly suitable
since they provide a cost-effective, high volume solution.Again, the
towels are presented one at a time to maximise hygiene.Tork
Advanced zigzag towels are currently the top selling Tork towel with
the NHS.
Several other sensible measures can be taken to help maximise
hygiene in hospital washrooms.Dispensers should be easy to clean
with no sharp corners where dirt can collect, and washrooms should
be user-friendly to ensure that handwashing is a painless process.
For instance, dispensers should be installed at a comfortable height
to avoid the need for any stretching or bending, and soap dispensers
should be positioned either directly above the sink or slightly to the
right to cater for the right-handed majority. Hand towel dispensers
should be over the sink or near the exits: if there is a natural flow of
washroom users from the toilet to the basin, the hand towels and then
the bin, the process is seamless and more people will wash and dry
their hands properly.
It is also important that soaps, hand towels and alcohol wipes never
run out. Regular checks should be made on the washrooms and
stickers should be placed on dispensers providing a contact number
for when consumables need replacing.This prompts the washroom
user to address any supply problems to an identifiable contact.
Healthcare-acquired infections are costing more than £1 billion a
year in the UK alone. Since the importance of hand hygiene in
hospitals is widely accepted, it makes sense to equip healthcare
washrooms with the right facilities
for the task in hand. More articles from SCA Hygiene Products UK Ltd: |