%0 Journal Article %T Hand hygiene practices among healthcare workers in a newborn unit of a tertiary referral hospital in Kenya %A Florence V Murila %A Rachel N Musoke %A Serah K Ngugi %J Journal of Infection Prevention %@ 1757-1782 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1757177418815556 %X Health care-associated infection (HCAI) is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality among hospitalised patients, particularly neonates. Compliance with hand hygiene (HH) recommendations is the simplest and most effective measure in preventing this infection. To determine the HH practices among healthcare workers (HCWs) in the newborn unit of a tertiary referral hospital in Kenya, their knowledge and perceptions regarding HCAI and importance of HH, and barriers to the recommended HH practices. A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted to evaluate the HCWs¡¯ compliance with the World Health Organization (WHO) ¡®5 Moments for Hand Hygiene¡¯ and a structured self-administered questionnaire adopted from the WHO knowledge and perception of HCW questionnaires was used to answer the secondary objectives. The overall HH compliance rate was 15%. HCWs were twice more likely to take a HH action ¡®after¡¯ than ¡®before¡¯ a patient care procedure (odds ratio [OR] = 2.05; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.02¨C4.19; P = 0.03). Nurses and nursing students had statistically significant lower compliance (OR 0.41; 95% CI = 0.18-0.91; p=0.016) and (OR 0.21; 95% CI = 0.06-0.70; p = 0.004) respectively, compared to the doctors. More than half (52%) of the HCWs were unaware of the five moments/indication for HH. Lack of supplies, forgetfulness and use of gloves were the commonly cited barriers to HH compliance. HH compliance rate among HCWs in the newborn unit of the tertiary referral hospital was very low. The observed and reported barriers to optimal HH compliance demonstrate a necessity for the adoption of the WHO recommended multimodal HH improvement strategy in this unit %K Hand hygiene %K practices %K newborn unit %K healthcare-associated infections %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1757177418815556