Nursing students observe lack of infection control practices: study

London – Non-compliance with infection prevention and control practices may be common among hospital workers, suggests a new study from Cardiff University and City University, London.

The study involved a survey of 488 Royal College of Nursing students, all of whom reported seeing at least one instance of a worker not following infection control procedures. Hand hygiene was the biggest issue, with more than 75 percent of students reporting that a worker did not wash his or her hands between patients, according to a press release from the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, which published the study.

Other unsafe behaviors cited in the study include workers wearing nail polish or nail extensions, not changing personal protective clothing between patients, improperly handling and disposing of sharp instruments, and touching their face or biting their nails while treating patients.

- Digital Partners -

However, researchers noted the study was limited by the small sample of students.

The study was published in the September issue of the American Journal of Infection Control.

- Digital Partners -

Next Webinar

When HOP Meets AI: A New Tension for Safety Leaders

Date: Thursday July 9th, 2026

Time: 12:00pm-1:00pm CDT

Sponsored By: Intelex

Register Now

Current Issue

What's Trending

From our Partners

Earn recertification points

Board of Certified Safety Professionals

Take a quiz about this issue of the magazine and earn recertification points from the Board of Certified Safety Professionals.