A brief (1-2 paragraph) description of the aims of the research of each peer-reviewed article. Clinical Health Issue “Antimicrobial Resistance”.

 A brief (1-2 paragraph) description of the aims of the research of each peer-reviewed article. Clinical Health Issue “Antimicrobial Resistance”.A brief (1-2 paragraph) description of the research methodology used. Be sure to identify if the methodology used was qualitative, quantitative, or a mixed-methods approach. Be specific. A brief (1- to 2-paragraph) description of the strengths of each of the research methodologies used, including reliability and validity of how the methodology was applied in each of the peer-reviewed articles you selected.

 

Clinical Health Issue “Antimicrobial Resistance”

  Article 1 Article 2 Article 3 Article 4
APA Citation Caselli, E. (2017). Hygiene: microbial strategies to reduce pathogens and drug resistance in clinical settings. Microbial biotechnology, 10(5), 1079-1083. Deepak, S. S. F., Kumar, S., Mehrishi, P., Solanki, S., Sharma, A., & Verma, S. (2020). Hand hygiene knowledge, attitude, practice, and hand microflora analysis of staff nurses in a rural tertiary care hospital. Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care, 9(9), 4969. Mody, L., Washer, L. L., Kaye, K. S., Gibson, K., Saint, S., Reyes, K., … & Perri, M. (2019). Multidrug-resistant organisms in hospitals: what is on patient hands and in their rooms?. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 69(11), 1837-1844. Squeri, R., Genovese, C., Palamara, M. A., Trimarchi, G., & La Fauci, V. (2016). Clean care

 

is safer care”: correct hand washing in the prevention of healthcare-associated

Infections. Ann Ig, 28(6), 409-415.

Why the article was chosen The above article was chosen because it focuses on the prevalence of microbial resistance in clinical settings and research-based sanitation mythologies and practices to reduce the same.  The essence of this article is that it illustrates a gap in the knowledge of nurses when it comes to the importance of handwashing in combating microbial resistance in hospitals. Furthermore, the article qualitatively illustrates that said gap in knowledge results in increased microbial resistance in said settings.  Aside from nurses and medical practitioners, this article illustrates that patients also play a role in enhancing microbial resistance. The paper shows the importance of educating patients on this role and the importance of handwashing and other strategies to eliminate said resistance.  While many people know the importance of handwashing, fewer people are aware of the correct way to achieve the desired result. This article was chosen as it sheds light on the right way to hand wash for all people in clinical settings to ensure microbial resistance is reduced.
Aims of the research The article aims to discern the most effective and efficient sanitation practices for eliminating microbes on hospital surfaces to reduce microbial resistance.  The article aims to discern the effect of knowledge acquisition on hygienic practices in clinical settings and how they affect microbial resistance.  This study aimed to investigate the extent to which hospital surfaces are infected with multi-drug resistant organisms (MDRO)  and suggest a means of reducing transmission of pathogens and healthcare-associated infections.  The study aimed to evaluate healthcare workers’ adherence to World Health Organization guidelines to hand hygiene and how it could impact the reduction of HCAI.

 

 

Research methodology This study was performed using a quantitative design. The study implemented microbiological surveillance on healthcare structures of Bacillus for four years analyzing for the presence of these microbes in samples from hospitalized patients.  This study also takes a mixed-methods approach involving quantifying the number of bacteria present on the subjects and determining the level of knowledge and their attitudes towards hand washing.  This qualitative study involves determining whether the microbes present in patient samples are the same as those on high-touch environmental surfaces.  This study was qualitative. It involved identifying areas with the highest HCAI risk and using direct observation studies to determine how different healthcare workers’ categories behave.
Strengths (Reliability and Validity)  This study is highly reliable as its result

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