Alert
This site has not been optimised for Internet Explorer due to Microsoft no longer providing support for the browser. Please view this site using another browser such as Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge.
Te Pū rauemi KOWHEORI-19 COVID-19 resource hub

Support for people working in health during the COVID-19 pandemic. Find information about how you can support yourselves and others, including consumers, teams and colleagues which complements and aligns with Ministry of Health resources.

Kia āta kōwhiri Choosing Wisely

The Choosing Wisely campaign seeks to reduce harm from unnecessary and low-value tests and treatment.

Hand Hygiene NZ logo - a graphic of two white hands against a dark blue box with a teal outline. Below this are the words 'hand hygiene NZ' and the tag line 'ringa horoia, aotearoa'Preventing the spread of infection through good hand hygiene. This section includes guidance, resources, and quality improvement frameworks to support your organisation to make positive, sustainable change to hand hygiene practice. It is also the gateway to the hand hygiene auditing application (HHCApp) and online training resources.

Good hand hygiene is one of the simplest, most effective ways to prevent the spread of healthcare-associated infections, which makes it a key patient safety priority.

Since 2012, Te Tāhū Hauora Health Quality & Safety Commission has led Hand Hygiene New Zealand (HHNZ), a national quality improvement programme to improve hand hygiene practice in Te Whatu Ora districts and private surgical hospitals throughout Aotearoa New Zealand.

The programme is part of the Te Tāhū Hauora infection prevention and control programme, which aims to reduce the harm and cost of healthcare-associated infections.

HHNZ uses the World Health Organization’s (WHO) multimodal hand hygiene improvement strategy to drive culture change and establish best hand hygiene practice for every patient, every time.

Frontline ownership is critical to the success of this strategy, in that it allows frontline staff to implement and drive change within their own clinical areas to support improvement.

Over the past 10 years, hospital health care staff have greatly improved their hand hygiene performance and, since 2015, have consistently exceeded the current national compliance rate of 80 percent.

In 2022, Te Tāhū Hauora reviewed the HHNZ programme, which included a stakeholder survey, literature review and horizon scan. The findings from this review will guide the shape of the programme in 2023.

If you have any questions about HHNZ please email hhnz@hqsc.govt.nz.

Published: 19 Oct 2021 Modified: 16 Jan 2024