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The Effects of Simultaneous Hand Washing by Nurse and Child Before IV Injection

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KMID : 0606120080140020129
Àֶ̾õ ( Lee Ae-Ran ) - ¿ø±¤º¸°Ç´ëÇÐ °£È£Çаú

¹Ú¹ÎÀÓ ( Park Min-Im ) - ¿ø±¤´ëÇб³º´¿ø
ÀÌÈ¿¼ø ( Lee Hyo-Soon ) - ¿ø±¤´ëÇб³º´¿ø
±è¼ÒÇö ( Kim So-Hyun ) - ¿ø±¤´ëÇб³º´¿ø
¹ÚÁø°æ ( Park Jin-Kyong ) - ¿ø±¤´ëÇб³º´¿ø
±èÁö¼ö ( Kim Ji-Soo ) - »óÁö´ëÇб³

Abstract

Purpose: To examine the effects on skin injury, pain, and anxiety when nurses and children simultaneous wash
their hands before IV injections.

Method: A nonequivalent control group, non-synchronized design study was used with 61 children. For a month and a half, children in the experimental group(30) following hand-washing guidelines, washed their hands with nurses before IV insertion. Anxiety and pain were observed and recorded during IV insertion using the Anxiety Reaction Scale and FACES pain scale. After 48-72 hours on IV therapy with an arm-board, skin condition was checked by a research assistant according to guidelines for assessing skin injury developed by the researcher. t-test, ¥ö©÷-test, Pearson correlation, and Kendall¡¯s tau b were used to analyze data with the SPSS program.

Results: Children who washed their hands with the nurse before IV insertion showed less pain (p =.021) and skin injury (p <.001) compared to the control group.

Conclusion: This finding suggests that simultaneous hand washing by nurse and child before IV injection has a strong effect on skin injury caused by arm-boards used to maintain IV therapy as well as on pain during IV insertion. This program demonstrates an effective intervention to prevent skin injuries in children on IV therapy.
KeyWords
Á¤¸ÆÁÖ»ç, ¼Õ¾Ä±â, ÇǺμջó, ÅëÁõ, ºÒ¾È
Intravenous injections, Handwashing, Skin injury, Pain, Anxiety
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ÇмúÁøÈïÀç´Ü(KCI) KoreaMed