The Effect of Infection Control Course on Nursing Students' Knowledge of and Compliance With Universal Precautions A Quasi-experimental Study
Background: Knowledge of and compliance with universal isolation precautions
are important issues and were found to be low in many previous studies. However,
there were no Jordanian studies that have examined the effect of an infection
control teaching course on nursing students' knowledge of and compliance with
universal precautions.
Purpose: This study aimed to assess knowledge and compliance levels, assess the
relationships between knowledge and compliance, and examine the effect of
infection control teaching courses on knowledge of and compliance with universal
precautions among university nursing students.
Methods: A quasi-experimental pretest/posttest design using a convenient sample
of 130 third-year nursing students was applied. The experimental group (n = 60)
were third-year nursing students who registered for infection control clinical course
for 3 months. On the other side, the control group (n = 70) were students at the same
academic level but did not register for the course and never attended the course.
Results: The mean knowledge of and compliance with universal precaution were
quite low, with a mean (SD) of 7.82 (1.98) and 49.36 (11.13) respectively. There
was a statistically significant weak positive correlation between knowledge of and
compliance with standard precaution (r = 0.28, P = .003). An independent t test
indicated a significant effect of the infection control clinical course (t119 = ?5.36,
P = .01) on knowledge mean score (mean [SD], 15.51 [1.41]) and compliance with
universal precaution mean score (mean [SD], 89.00 [10.17]; t119 = 6.26, P = .02)
compared to the control group. Paired t test revealed that knowledge andcompliance were significantly higher in the posttest than in the pretest in the
experimental group compared with the control group.
Conclusion: Knowledge of and compliance with universal precautions were
relatively low among nursing students. The application of an infection control
teaching course helps improve both knowledge of and compliance with universal
precautions among university nursing students.