Premium
Hand hygiene of nursing and midwifery students in Cambodia
Author(s) -
Tem Chanoeun,
Kong Choury,
Him Nayphut,
Sann Nimol,
Chang Soon Bok,
Choi Jeeyae
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international nursing review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1466-7657
pISSN - 0020-8132
DOI - 10.1111/inr.12547
Subject(s) - hygiene , nursing , medicine , descriptive statistics , nurse midwives , population , developing country , obstetrics , family medicine , environmental health , pregnancy , statistics , mathematics , pathology , biology , economics , genetics , economic growth
Aim To determine the relationship between knowledge, attitude and the practice of hand hygiene by nursing and midwifery students in Cambodia. Background Hand hygiene is the most cost‐effective means to prevent hospital‐acquired infections. Techniques of hand hygiene are simple; however, many researchers have found hand hygiene knowledge, attitude and practice to be poor in many healthcare settings worldwide, especially in developing countries. Cambodia is a developing country in Southeast Asia and data regarding hand hygiene are limited. Methods A cross‐sectional descriptive study was conducted to assess the level of knowledge, attitude and practice of hand hygiene. Students in nursing and midwifery programmes were the target population ( n = 300). Survey data were collected from January to May 2017. Descriptive statistics, t ‐tests and correlation coefficients were calculated to assess relationships between student knowledge, attitude and hand hygiene practice. Result The level of knowledge, attitude and practice of hand hygiene in nursing and midwifery students was moderate. A majority of students had received hand hygiene training. There was no significant difference between nursing and midwifery students in knowledge, attitude and practice of hand hygiene. However, a Pearson correlation of attitude and practice had a weak positive relationship. Conclusion Both nursing and midwifery students demonstrated moderate levels of knowledge, attitudes and practice of hand hygiene. Implication for nursing and health policy This study identified a need for hand hygiene training. Developing training programmes to improve attitudes about hand hygiene is strongly recommended. Effective training may contribute to change behaviours of hand hygiene (attitude), improve practice and ultimately reduce hospital‐acquired infections.