Your Five Moments explained Home based care WHO Five Moments approach to hand hygiene April 2009
What are the Five Moments? An approach to hand hygiene developed by The World Health Organisation Aims to ensure hand hygiene is geographically appropriate Aims to ensure hand hygiene is temporally appropriate
Why was the Five moments approach developed To reduce unnecessary hand hygiene To stress the importance of the correct location and time for hand hygiene To ensure the chain of transmission is broken by hand hygiene and thus prevent HCAI
What is a Moment for hand hygiene? A moment is a temporal point, i.e. a specific time marked by a point in staff workflow A moment is not a reason, or indicator, for hand hygiene Each moment is a time when many indicators for hand hygiene can occur
What is an indicator for hand hygiene? An indicator for hand hygiene is an individual action carried out someone providing care This can be any action that can be considered as belonging to one of the Five Moments This specifically applies to actions which take place within a patient zone
Patient zone This is an area in the immediate vicinity of the patient where care is provided In a patients home this only exists at the times when care is being provided However it is not specific in relation to types of professional or types of care be they medical, social, nursing, supportive, mental health or any other
The care recipient The word patient is used to describe the care recipient This is because the five moment approach was developed for in-patient care Locally you may use any term you wish to describe the care recipient
When do patient zones exist? Only when a someone resides in an area where care is provided The patient zone ceases to exist when the care provision ends The patient zone includes equipment used at the point of care
WHEN? WHY? Clean your hands when approaching a patient at the point of care WHY? To protect the patient from harmful germs carried on your hands
Moment one Occurs before first contact with a patient Occurs as near to the point of care as possible May occur in combination with other moments
WHEN? WHY? Clean your hands immediately before any clean/aseptic procedure WHY? To protect the patient from harmful germs from the environment, and themselves, being introduced
Moment two Important to stop introduction of environmental pathogens to the patient Also stops invasive introduction of the patient own flora May be combined with moment one, but ONLY if the first patient contact is a clean/aseptic procedure This moment will be more relevant to certain professions than to others
WHEN? WHY? Clean your hands immediately after an exposure risk to body fluids, including after glove removal WHY? To protect yourself against harmful germs from the patient and patient zone
Moment three The rationale for moment three is to prevent contamination of care providers with germs carried in patients body fluids It is important to realise that even if gloves have been worn during a task this constitutes an exposure risk, once gloves have been removed the hands cannot be considered clean until moment 3 has been complied with
WHEN? WHY? Clean your hands after touching a patient when leaving the point of care WHY? To protect yourself, and the next patient, and their home against harmful germs from the patient you are leaving
WHEN? WHY? Clean your hands after touching any object or furniture in the patient zone, even if the patient is not present or has not been touched WHY? To protect yourself, and the next patient, and their home against harmful germs from the patient zone you are leaving
Summary There are some key definitions within the Five Moments approach Moments Indicators Point of care Patient zone Compliance These are illustrated and explained in the DVD My Five Moments for hand hygiene and supporting presentations
Reference and support For references see the resource pack reference list For support contact the cleanyourhands campaign coordinator in your organisation For more information see the cleanyourhands campaign website at www.npsa.nhs.uk/cleanyourhands