Next time you visit a hospital or a clinic, don바카라™t shake hands to greet your doctor. There바카라™s no guarantee that your doctor바카라™s hands are clean. Say 바카라śHello,바카라ť instead. Follow the Don바카라™t-shake-hands campaigns that are in the air across the world. Or just do a 바카라śnamaste,바카라ť as doctors from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) are saying now.
Do the history first
The year was 1846. Ignaz Semmelweis, a young doctor in Vienna, was worried about the rising number of women dying of 바카라śchildbed fever바카라ť in the maternity wards of the hospital where he practised. After numerous tests, trials and errors he finally figured out why: the doctors and medical staff did not clean their hands and instruments. He imposed a protocol of washing hands with soap and chlorine solution. And the deaths fell dramatically. In his enthusiasm, however, he annoyed his colleagues and lost his job.
Over 173 years later
Much has changed in the world of medicine. Illness is no longer a mystery. Antibiotics have changed medicine바카라”and the thin line between life and death바카라”forever. Hands are now believed to be the most common vehicle for the transmission of germs from patient to patient within the hospital or clinical setting바카라”more than the air circulating in a hospital, the water system or exposure to stethoscopes, computers, medical charts, phones, uniforms, beds, chairs, tables and floors. With it all, hand hygiene has emerged as the prime tool of reducing the burden of healthcare associated infections (HAIs). What바카라™s more, hand washing with (antimicrobial) soap and water is passĂ©: not only is it tedious and time-consuming, it fails to control HAIs effectively. Alcohol-based hand rub for 20 seconds is emerging as the preferred new protocol.
What hasn바카라™t changed
Across the world, many healthcare workers do not wash their hands nearly as often as they should, with just about 40 per cent believed to comply with the hand hygiene regimen worldwide. And if you consider doctors specifically, it바카라™s just 32 per cent. Why don바카라™t doctors wash their hands? Knowledge about proper hand hygiene in clinical settings remains poor, shows a 2015 study by AIIMS and Lady Hardinge Medical College. A 2018 study in Australian hospitals reveals that doctors and nurses fail to properly wash their hands when no one monitors their behaviour. In 2016, research conducted over 1,000 US hospitals, along with some in Japan and Italy has found that infection prevention initiatives are often resisted actively by healthcare workers. A 2014 study from Denmark shows, one in five surgeons fails to wash hands after going to the washroom.
Don바카라™t shake hands
Anti-handshake experiments have started. The Institute of Biological, Environmental, and Rural Sciences, Aberystwyth University, UK, has shown how greetings like the high five and fist bump, instead of the traditional handshake, can dramatically reduce the transmission of infectious diseases. Paediatrics at the neonatal intensive care units of University of California, Los Angeles, have come up with 바카라śHandshake-Free Zones,바카라ť to help reduce the spread of germs. Not banning handshakes, but approving other options, say, a fist bump, a smile. For the World Antibiotic Awareness Week, around the last week of November, AIIMS started a Namaste campaign, with doctors and nurses joining hands in a namaste to greet everyone and reduce the risk of infection. Led by Dr S.K. Chaudhary, head of the cardiothoracic unit, the aim of the campaign was to spread awareness.