Review
‘Clean Care is Safer Care’: the Global Patient Safety Challenge 2005–2006

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Summary

Background

Each year the treatment and care of hundreds of millions of patients worldwide is complicated by infections acquired during healthcare. The impact of healthcare-associated infection may imply prolonged stays in hospital, long-term disability, massive additional financial burden, and deaths.

Action

Patient safety is a global issue that affects both developed and developing countries. In October 2004, the World Health Organization launched the World Alliance for Patient Safety to co-ordinate and accelerate improvements in patient safety internationally. A core element of the Alliance is the identification of a topic to be addressed as a Global Patient Safety Challenge over a two-year cycle. The first topic chosen for 2005–2006 is healthcare-associated infection.

Perspectives

The Challenge aims at implementing several actions to tackle healthcare-associated infections worldwide, regardless of the level of development of healthcare systems and the availability of resources. Implementation strategies include the integration in different healthcare settings of multiple interventions in the areas of blood safety, injection safety, and clinical procedure safety, as well as water, sanitation, and waste management, with the promotion of hand hygiene in healthcare as the cornerstone.

Keywords

Patient safety
Healthcare-associated infection
Prevention
Hand hygiene
Infection control
World Health Organization

Cited by (0)

On behalf of the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Patient Safety Challenge (Lead, Professor D. Pittet), World Alliance for Patient Safety, WHO Headquarters, Geneva, Switzerland.