No-touch intermittent catheterization: Caregiver point of view on sterility errors, duration, comfort and costs - Abstract

Aims: To determine which method of intermittent urinary catheterization, sterile with a catheterization-set or the no-touch method, offers the most advantages for caregivers in a hospital setting.

Background: The no-touch catheter is assumed to decrease the risk for infection and increase the comfort for caregivers due to its construction, however, evidence is lacking.

Design: A cross-over experimental study was carried out from October until December 2009, 100 nurses and 71 nursing students participated.

Method:  Every participant had to catheterize as well according to the no-touch method as to the standard intermittent catheterization method. A randomization programme determined whether the subjects had to catheterize a male or female simulation model.

Findings: Multiple regression analysis shows that nurses and nursing students appear to make on average two more errors with the sterile intermittent catheterization method with set than with the no-touch method. The duration of the no-touch method is 92 seconds less than the classical catheterization method. On a scale with 10 points for comfort, the classical sterile method with set scored on average two points lower than the no-touch method, as well for the nurses as for the students.

Conclusions: Compared with the classical method, both students and nurses spend less time on performing the no-touch method, less sterility errors are made and a higher score is assigned to the no-touch method. Also classical catheterization of men implies higher costs compared with the no-touch method. No-touch intermittent catheterization is thus expected to be preferred above the gold standard catheterization method.

Written by:
Goessaert AS, Antoons S, Van Den Driessche M, Tourchi A, Pieters R, Everaert K   Are you the author?
Department of Urology, Ghent University, Belgium

Reference: J Adv Nurs. 2012 Dec 23. (Epub ahead of print)
doi: 10.1111/jan.12062


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 23278907

Read an expert commentary on this paper written by Diane K. Newman, DNP, FAAN, BCB-PMD