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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05540886

CLEAN Frontline: A Stepped Wedge Cluster Trial

CLEAN FRONTLINE CAMBODIA A Stepped Wedge Cluster Trial of an Environmental Hygiene Educational Intervention Across Thirteen Cambodian Hospitals

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
390 (actual)
Sponsor
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Environmental hygiene is a key component of infection prevention in healthcare, and a driver of healthcare associated infections. Staff who clean in many low resource countries receive no formal training on cleaning, waste disposal and linen handling. This issue has been execrated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The only recommended training on environmental hygiene for low resourced facilities, TEACH CLEAN, uses a training of trainers model. A selected cadre "champions" which in turn train their peers with responsibilities on environmental hygiene at the facility level. Early pilot data to test its effectiveness of this training package are very promising. The main objective is to evaluate the effectiveness of an environmental cleaning bundle to improve microbiological cleanliness in Cambodian hospitals. The latest TEACH CLEAN will be implemented across all hospitals (13) of three provinces in Cambodia. A stepped wedge randomised trial will be used to evaluate the effectiveness of TEACH CLEAN to improve microbiological cleanliness in Cambodian hospitals. All facilities will receive the intervention. Hospitals are arranged in groups of three or four based on the randomisation with staggered commencement dates of the intervention at four distinct time points. The design will include ten months of data collection. We expect one month gap between the training of champions and the training of staff at the facility level. The main outcome is microbiological cleanliness (\<2.5 cfu/cm2 = clean ; ≥2.5 cfu/cm2 = not clean) measured using a non-specific agar on one side for measuring total Aerobic Colony Counts (ACC/cm2). With 30 sampling sites in each hospital and with a pre-training cleanliness proportion ranging from 30% to 50% will give us over 85% power to detect a 10% absolute post-intervention increase in cleanliness. Evidence from this trial will contribute to future policy and practice guidelines about hospital environmental hygiene and ultimately reduce healthcare associated infections. This would be the first randomised trial on environmental hygiene in low resource settings.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALTEACH CLEANThe intervention is primary a training facility cleaning champions to educate and supervise other existing facility cleaners with environmental hygiene responsibilities - training of trainers (ToT). The training content includes as much as possible the seven contextualized modules of TEACH CLEAN training package (CLEAN BOX): i) Introduction to Infection Prevention and Control, ii) Personal hygiene and dress code, iii) Hand hygiene, iv) Personal protective equipment, v) Housekeeping/control of environment, vi) Waste handling, and vii) Linen handling. Facility training will occur in three selected wards: i) maternity ward, including labour and post-natal rooms, ii) medicine ward, iii) and medicine ward. There is also supervision stage that refers to ongoing mentorship of cleaning champions by the local partner while they educate and supervise existing facility cleaners with environmental hygiene responsibilities.

Timeline

Start date
2022-03-01
Primary completion
2023-03-31
Completion
2023-03-31
First posted
2022-09-15
Last updated
2024-10-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Cambodia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05540886. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.