1. Introduction
Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) are considered one of the most important healthcare problems because they significantly affect the quality of healthcare and prognosis of patients [
1]. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the United States, HAIs are steadily decreasing recently, but one in 25 hospitalized patients each year still experiences hospital infections [
2]. The Ministry of Health and Welfare in South Korea estimates that 5–10% of hospitalized patients also suffer from HAIs; therefore, there is a need for prevention efforts against HAIs [
3].
HAIs are caused by close contact between patients and healthcare workers. Among these workers, nurses spend the most time with the patients [
4]. Nurses are therefore at the most risk of exposure to HAIs and can also cause cross-infection in patients. Nursing students are no exception [
5,
6]. They have direct contact with patients and perform diverse procedures that may contact the body fluids of the patient, in order to develop their skills during clinical practice training [
7]. Thus, it is critical that nursing students should not to be exposed to HAIs.
Occupational exposure leading to HAIs is defined as when a nurse or nursing student is injured by a sharp instrument such as a needle or when the skin or mucosa are contaminated by blood, saliva, or other suspected infectious body fluids [
8]. Previous studies have reported that nursing students have a high risk of occupational exposure to infections: varying from 8.8% to 73.0% according to geographical area [
7,
9,
10]. About 23–73% of Korean nursing students have been reported to have experienced occupational exposure during clinical practice training, showing that efforts to reduce occupational exposure are necessary [
11,
12].
The best strategy for preventing occupational exposure is acknowledged to be raising compliance with infection prevention and control (IPC) practices such as standard precautions [
13]. However, compliance with IPC practices has been evaluated mainly only in nurses, not nursing students, and nurses’ low compliance has been a constant problem [
14]. Some recent studies have reported a similar trend of low compliance among nursing students [
5,
6,
15]. In order to increase compliance, it is necessary to identify factors affecting it.
In order to examine compliance with IPC and its predictors among nursing students, it is best to study students who are about to graduate, to determine their level of compliance with IPC when they have almost completed their undergraduate program, as this also shows if programs need to be improved to raise compliance in students. To the best of our knowledge, although a few studies have evaluated compliance with IPC during clinical practice among graduating nursing students who have completed clinical practice [
12,
15], there are no studies evaluating occupational exposure as a factor affecting compliance with IPC. In this context, the purpose of this study was to evaluate compliance with IPC among prospective graduating nursing students and examine the factors influencing it. It aimed to comprehensively evaluate the relationships between occupational exposure, perceived safe environment, attitude toward and knowledge about IPC, and compliance with IPC. This study will inform compliance improvement efforts for Korean nursing students and point to ways to improve undergraduate education for prevention of occupational exposure.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design and Setting
This study adapted a descriptive, cross-sectional study conducted at two university nursing schools in one city in South Korea. Since the university semester in Korea ends in December, the current study was conducted in December 2019, with 4th year students who were about to graduate.
2.2. Participants
This study used convenience sampling for prospective graduates from two schools of nursing. The inclusion criteria were that participants must be senior students who had completed clinical practice and who agreed to participate in the study. Using the G-Power program, 147 subjects were required for a medium effect size of 0.15, α = 0.05, power of 0.90, and 10 variables in the multiple regression analysis. The questionnaire was distributed to 200 students to compensate for the anticipated drop-out rate. The response rate was 89%.
2.3. Ethical Considerations
This study was conducted after approval by the institutional review board of the university with which the principal researcher was affiliated (IRB No. HIRB-2019-090). The respondents participated in the study after receiving explanation of the study’s goals and format and filling out the informed consent form. Research tools were modified and used after approval from the original authors.
2.4. Survey Tools
This self-administrated survey consisted of five parts. Part I collected demographic data such as age and gender, experience of and need for education related to IPC, and experience of exposure to needle injury and blood or body fluid. Part II assessed knowledge of IPC. A knowledge tool was developed based on the standard precautions against hospital-acquired infection of the Korea Center for Disease Control and Prevention [
2], adapting the knowledge questionnaire developed by Mitchell et al. [
15]. The tool consisted of 25 questions in three areas: standard precautions, transmission-based precautions, and multi-drug-resistant organism (MDRO) control. A correct answer was awarded 1 point and a wrong answer 0; the higher the score, the higher the level of knowledge. Part III evaluated attitude toward IPC using a tool consisting of nine items developed by Cho [
16]. Each item was answered either yes (1) or no (0); higher scores indicated a positive attitude toward IPC. Part IV assessed students’ perception of the existence of a safe environment for IPC using the tool developed by Cho [
16] and modified by Park [
17], with nine items, answered yes (1) or no (0); the higher the score, the better the perceived environmental support for IPC. Part V measured students’ compliance with IPC during their clinical practice, using a tool modified by the present researcher from the compliance tool based on universal precautions developed by Regina et al. [
18]. It consisted of 17 items using a 5-point Likert scale; the higher the score, the higher the compliance.
Internal reliability using the Kuder–Richardson Formula 20 (KR20) for the knowledge test was 0.64 in this study, while for attitude toward IPC it was 0.56. The KR20 for safe environment was 0.70 in Park [
17] and 0.62 in this study. The compliance tool achieved a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.72 in the original study and of 0.71 in this study.
For construct validity of the compliance tool, the assumption of exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was satisfied based on the Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin index of 0.786 and the Chi-squared of 964.677 (p < 0.001) for Bartlett’s test of sphericity. The EFA supported five factors, following the original version of the tool, with cumulative variance percentage of 61.9%.
2.5. Data Collection
The researchers distributed questionnaires to the participants and explained the study’s goals, methods, potential benefits and risks, autonomy in participation, withdrawal from the study, and confidentiality. Subjects were also given an explanation of how to fill out questionnaires. Those who agreed to participate signed the consent form and completed the questionnaire at a convenient time. One week after the distribution of the survey, the consent form and questionnaire were collected through the student representatives so that the researchers could not influence the survey response.
2.6. Data Analysis
Data were analyzed using SPSS 23.0 (IBM Corp, Armonk, NY, USA). The participants’ background characteristics, experience of occupational exposure and the score of compliance with IPC were evaluated by descriptive statistics. The difference in IPC compliance score was examined through an independent t-test based on the experience of occupational exposure. The Pearson correlation was calculated to test the relationships between knowledge, attitude, safe environment, and compliance. A multiple regression analysis that included five factors (experience with needle injury, blood/body fluid exposure, knowledge, attitude, and safe environment) was conducted to identify predictors affecting compliance with IPC practices during clinical practice training. Reliability was evaluated by KR20 and Cronbach’s alpha. Construct validity for the compliance tool was evaluated using the EFA based on principal component analysis with varimax rotation.
4. Discussion
This study demonstrates that compliance with IPC practices among Korean nursing students ahead of graduation is moderate. The study participants (79.74%) showed higher compliance with IPC than students in Australia (59.8%) [
15] and Saudi Arabia (61.8%) [
6] but lower than in Jordan (84.3%) [
19]. Such differences have been argued to be due to different curriculum and clinical environments among countries [
19].
It is worth mentioning that not only this study but also previous studies have consistently reported low compliance with use of protective devices but high compliance with cross-infection prevention measures such as handwashing. In particular, the use of eye shields or goggles was the lowest among compliance areas investigated here, consistent with previous studies [
6,
20]. Wearing protective devices such as goggles, mask, and gown against blood or body fluids seems to be affected by their availability in the clinical setting. This is supported by a study reporting that compliance was improved by providing sufficient protection materials [
21]. In this light, it is necessary to have sufficient protective devices and provide them to students in training hospitals. This will help prevent not only occupational exposure of vulnerable nursing students but also cross-infections in patients.
Another point to focus on is that, in this study, compliance with covering wounds or lesions with a waterproof dressing was also low, even though about half of students had had blood, urine, or sweat exposure on their skin or mucous membranes. Low compliance in covering one’s wound or lesion is consistent with studies by Alshammari et al. [
6] (55.4%) and Colet et al. [
22] (61.4%). These findings need to be noted because nursing students are vulnerable to occupational exposure to infection through their non-intact skin, if the patient has any infection. Hence, increasing students’ awareness about the necessity of dressing their wounds is important, as is an environment in which covering devices are readily available.
Meanwhile, as in this study, in previous studies few students officially reported their exposure to their clinical practice professors or preceptors for follow-up after exposure [
7]. More than three-quarters of students did not know what to do after they were exposed in the study by Souza-Borges et al. [
7], a finding supported by the finding in this study that 63.48% of students needed more education on how to cope after exposure. Nursing students should be trained to know about major pathogens that can infect them through occupational exposure, how to prevent such infections, how to cope with exposure, and how to report, before they begin their clinical practice training [
7].
As well as blood and fluid exposure, 14.61% of nursing students had experienced needlestick injury during their clinical practice in the current study. In other studies, conducted in Korea [
23] and Brazil [
7], the incidence of needlestick injury among nursing students was as high as 26.9% and 67.6%, respectively. Although the rate of prior experience of needlestick injury was lower here than in the previous studies, it is still a serious problem in our context. According to previous studies, lack of technical skills and recapping of used needles are major reasons for needlestick injury [
7,
9]; however, universal precautions announced for IPC in 1987 indicate that used needles should not be recapped [
24]. Despite continuing education about the risk of needle recapping, nursing students worldwide frequently recap used needles [
9]. In this study, one-quarter of students recapped needles after giving an injection. Graduates of nursing school are novices or advanced beginners who need to practice developing their nursing skills. Therefore, preceptors should assess, educate, and monitor not only graduates’ skills but also their safety awareness when implementing procedures [
9].
There was a significant association between occupational exposure and subscale scores for compliance, in spite of the lack of a significant relationship between occupational exposure and total compliance score. That is, students who had not experienced occupational exposure showed significantly higher compliance with IPC practices, including prevention of cross-infection, using protective devices, and decontamination of spills and used instruments, than those who had experienced it. This finding supports the assertion that improving compliance with IPC practices can be a good strategy to prevent occupational exposure to infection in nursing students [
13,
25].
In this study, perceived safe environment for IPC was a significant predictor of nursing students’ compliance with IPC practices, congruent with a study by Cruz [
5] and with other studies conducted with Korean nurses [
16,
17]. Safe environment can be defined as the shared perception of management for safety support and feedback regarding IPC in hospitals, including a supportive work environment as well as adequate infrastructure and resources [
14]. The fact that perception of a safe environment in relation to IPC affects students’ compliance means that the hospital’s infection prevention climate needs to be improved to increase students’ compliance and protect them and other health workers. To do this, administrative support is required [
26]. In addition, other staff, in particular preceptors, in training hospitals need to actively work to prevent HAIs and help nursing students to perceive a safe environment as important.
The attitude score of students in the study was 7.02 out of 8, which is quite positive and was the other significant predictor for IPC compliance. In a study of knowledge and attitude in Jordanian nursing students, it was reported that not knowledge but attitude had a significant effect on compliance [
27], which is the same result as in the current study. These results suggest that improving attitudes toward IPC practice is important. This is supported by a study on IPC practices among nurses, which showed that IPC compliance was motivated more by nurses’ subjective attitudes or beliefs than by objective knowledge [
28]. For IPC compliance, knowledge is considered to be a mediator of behavioral change, causing a change in attitudes rather than directly changing behavior [
12]. Therefore, it is necessary to increase compliance with IPC by raising awareness of the need for IPC and promoting a positive attitude.
Overall, this study has demonstrated that the participants have insufficient knowledge of IPC and that their knowledge was not significantly related to their compliance. Their low knowledge level was consistent with the 59.8% correct answer rate in a study that evaluated nursing students’ knowledge of standard precautions and transmission-based precautions [
15]. However, it was lower than the 76.6–83.0% correct rate in studies that only assessed standard precautions [
12,
19]. Looking at previous studies, a few have found that knowledge has a significant effect on compliance [
20], but many more studies have reported that knowledge has no significant effect [
18,
19,
27,
29]. It can be inferred that knowledge does not directly change practice and therefore does not affect compliance of nursing students [
6]. In order to enhance compliance with IPC, it is necessary to improve educational methods that can be applied in clinical practice rather than simply conveying knowledge about IPC. According to the curriculum policy of nursing education in Korea, moreover, IPC education is provided as a small part of the fundamentals of nursing courses in the first or second year [
12]. It mainly covers how to prevent patients’ infection in hospitals, and there is no curriculum dealing with students’ occupational exposure. It is necessary to continuously promote compliance with IPC through repetitive reinforcement during clinical practice courses rather than one-time education about IPC in a fundamentals of nursing course. Standardized guidelines for students’ occupational exposure need to be established and inculcated.
This study has several limitations. First, it may be difficult to generalize the findings of a study conducted at only two nursing schools in only one Korean city. Second, this descriptive study is based on self-reported compliance with IPC practice, which may be different from the situation found under direct observation. Third, since this study uses a cross-sectional design, it is not clear what the causal relationships are between independent and dependent variables. That is to say, although the non-occupational exposure group had a higher compliance score than the exposure group, it remains possible that highly compliant students are less likely to be occupationally exposed than less compliant students. Future studies that involve a large number of universities, assess compliance by other methods such as direct observation, and identify cause-and-effect relationships are warranted. Nevertheless, this study is significant for three reasons. First, the data for this research were collected when students were almost finished with the nursing program. Therefore, the paper was able to identify areas that required improvements to increase students’ compliance. Second, this is one of the few studies to have investigated the relationship between occupational exposure and compliance in nursing students. Finally, this study makes a contribution by indicating the importance of a perceived safe environment and of a positive attitude to improve nursing students’ compliance with IPC and prevent occupational exposure.