Effect of Hand Hygiene on Infectious Disease Risk in the Community Setting: A Meta-Analysis

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Effect of Hand Hygiene on Infectious Disease Risk in the Community Setting: A Meta-Analysis
Abstract
To quantify the effect of hand-hygiene interventions on rates of gastrointestinal and respiratory illnesses and to identify interventions that provide the greatest efficacy, we searched 4 electronic databases for hand-hygiene trials published from January 1960 through May 2007 and conducted meta-analyses to generate pooled rate ratios across interventions (N=30 studies)., Improvements in hand hygiene resulted in reductions in gastrointestinal illness of 31% (95% confidence intervals [CI]=19%, 42%) and reductions in respiratory illness of 21% (95% CI=5%, 34%). The most beneficial intervention was hand-hygiene education with use of nonantibacterial soap. Use of antibacterial soap showed little added benefit compared with use of nonantibacterial soap., Hand hygiene is clearly effective against gastrointestinal and, to a lesser extent, respiratory infections. Studies examining hygiene practices during respiratory illness and interventions targeting aerosol transmission are needed.
Publication
American Journal of Public Health
Date
2008-8
Volume
98
Issue
8
Pages
1372-1381
Journal Abbr
Am J Public Health
Accessed
6/4/22, 1:46 PM
ISSN
0090-0036
Short Title
Effect of Hand Hygiene on Infectious Disease Risk in the Community Setting
Library Catalog
PubMed Central
Extra
PMID: 18556606 PMCID: PMC2446461
Citation
Aiello, A. E., Coulborn, R. M., Perez, V., & Larson, E. L. (2008). Effect of Hand Hygiene on Infectious Disease Risk in the Community Setting: A Meta-Analysis. American Journal of Public Health, 98(8), 1372–1381. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2007.124610
Link to this record