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Infection prevention and control programs in Armenian Psychoneurological Hospitals

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1. Title Title of document Infection prevention and control programs in Armenian Psychoneurological Hospitals
2. Creator Author's name, affiliation, country G. O. Palozyan; National Center of Disease Control and Prevention of the Ministry of Health of Armenia; Армения
2. Creator Author's name, affiliation, country Sh. M. Avetisyan; National Center of Disease Control and Prevention of the Ministry of Health of Armenia; Армения
2. Creator Author's name, affiliation, country R. A. Abovyan; National Center of Disease Control and Prevention of the Ministry of Health of Armenia; Армения
2. Creator Author's name, affiliation, country G. G. Melik-Andreasyan; National Center of Disease Control and Prevention of the Ministry of Health of Armenia; Армения
3. Subject Discipline(s)
3. Subject Keyword(s) infection prevention and control (IPC); IPC program; evaluation; Armenia; psychoneurological hospital; questionnaire; IPCAF
4. Description Abstract

Aim of the study: to characterize the integration and implementation of the main components of infection prevention and control (IPC), defined by the World Health Organization (WHO), in psychoneurological hospitals in Armenia.

Materials and methods. The study was conducted over the period from 2019 to 2022 in all 8 psychoneurological hospitals in Armenia. The research tool was based on using the IPCAF (Infection Prevention and Control Assessment Framework) questionnaire translated into Armenian, consisting of 8 sections. In accordance with the WHO scoring methodology, each possible answer to the question was scored. The maximum total score for each core component could be 100 points, and the final score — 800. Descriptive epidemiology was used during the study.

Results. The average final score for all IPCAF components for all neuropsychiatric hospitals in Armenia over the entire study period was increased by 1.46 times (from 345.0±10.7 points in 2019 to 502.5±32.5 in 2022; р < 0.01) and in 2022 was characterized as an “intermediate level”. Analysis by individual IPC core components (CC) found that the highest average scores in 2022 were obtained for components CC2 (IPC guidelines) — 81.6 points, CC8 (Built environment, materials and equipment for IPC at the facility level) — 72.8 points, and CC5 (Multimodal strategies) — 70.0 points. The lowest average scores were obtained for the key components: CC4 (Health care-associated infection (HAI) surveillance) — 45.0 points, and for CC3 (IPC education and training) — 56.3 points and CC7 (Workload, staffing and bed occupancy) — 56.9 points.

Conclusion. Our study demonstrated for the first time an opportunity for using the IPCAF questionnaire to evaluate IPC programs in neuropsychiatric hospitals and identify gaps in various areas of IPC. Information was received regarding the state of key IPC component implementation in psychoneurological hospitals in Armenia. Analysis by individual core components identified gaps that need to be addressed. It is recommended to implement continuous monitoring of compliance with various aspects of IPC in order to prevent weakening of control and deterioration of epidemiological situation.

5. Publisher Organizing agency, location SPb RAACI
6. Contributor Sponsor(s)
7. Date (DD-MM-YYYY) 28.02.2024
8. Type Status & genre Peer-reviewed Article
8. Type Type Research Article
9. Format File format PDF (Rus),
10. Identifier Uniform Resource Identifier https://iimmun.ru/iimm/article/view/17610
10. Identifier Digital Object Identifier (DOI) 10.15789/2220-7619-IPA-17610
11. Source Title; vol., no. (year) Russian Journal of Infection and Immunity; Vol 14, No 1 (2024)
12. Language English=en ru
13. Relation Supp. Files Figure 1. Average total IPCAF score by capital/regions in 2019–2022 (136KB)
Figure 2. Average scores for IPCAF core components in 2019–2022 (306KB)
14. Coverage Geo-spatial location, chronological period, research sample (gender, age, etc.)
15. Rights Copyright and permissions Copyright (c) 2024 Palozyan G.O., Avetisyan S.M., Abovyan R.A., Melik-Andreasyan G.G.
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