TY - JOUR
T1 - Rural Indonesian health care workers' constructs of infection prevention and control knowledge
AU - Marjadi, Brahmaputra
AU - McLaws, Mary-Louise
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Background: Understanding the constructs of knowledge behind clinical practices in low-resource rural health care settings with limited laboratory facilities and surveillance programs may help in designing resource-appropriate infection prevention and control education. Methods: Multiple qualitative methods of direct observations, individual and group focus discussions, and document analysis were used to examine health care workers’ knowledge of infection prevention and control practices in intravenous therapy, antibiotic therapy, instrument reprocessing, and hand hygiene in 10 rural Indonesian health care facilities. Results: Awareness of health care-associated infections was low. Protocols were in the main based on verbal instructions handed down through the ranks of health care workers. The evidence-based knowledge gained across professional training was overridden by empiricism, nonscientific modifications, and organizational and societal cultures when resources were restricted or patients demanded inappropriate therapies. This phenomenon remained undetected by accreditation systems and clinical educators. Conclusion: Rural Indonesian health care workers would benefit from a formal introduction to evidence-based practice that would deconstruct individual protocols that include nonscientific knowledge. To achieve levels of acceptable patient safety, protocols would have to be both evidence-based and resource-appropriate.
AB - Background: Understanding the constructs of knowledge behind clinical practices in low-resource rural health care settings with limited laboratory facilities and surveillance programs may help in designing resource-appropriate infection prevention and control education. Methods: Multiple qualitative methods of direct observations, individual and group focus discussions, and document analysis were used to examine health care workers’ knowledge of infection prevention and control practices in intravenous therapy, antibiotic therapy, instrument reprocessing, and hand hygiene in 10 rural Indonesian health care facilities. Results: Awareness of health care-associated infections was low. Protocols were in the main based on verbal instructions handed down through the ranks of health care workers. The evidence-based knowledge gained across professional training was overridden by empiricism, nonscientific modifications, and organizational and societal cultures when resources were restricted or patients demanded inappropriate therapies. This phenomenon remained undetected by accreditation systems and clinical educators. Conclusion: Rural Indonesian health care workers would benefit from a formal introduction to evidence-based practice that would deconstruct individual protocols that include nonscientific knowledge. To achieve levels of acceptable patient safety, protocols would have to be both evidence-based and resource-appropriate.
KW - Indonesia
KW - employees
KW - infection control
KW - medical care
UR - http://handle.westernsydney.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:38249
U2 - 10.1016/j.ajic.2009.11.010
DO - 10.1016/j.ajic.2009.11.010
M3 - Article
SN - 0196-6553
VL - 38
SP - 399
EP - 403
JO - American Journal of Infection Control
JF - American Journal of Infection Control
IS - 5
ER -