PRACTICE OF INFECTION CONTROL MEASURES AMONG NURSING STUDENTS IN A TERTIARY ACADEMIC INSTITUTION IN BENIN CITY, EDO STATE

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Abstract
This study assessed the practice of infection control measures, influencing factors, barriers, and the relationship between academic level and adherence among undergraduate nursing students in a tertiary institution in Edo State. A descriptive cross-sectional design was adopted, and data were collected from 244 students using a structured self-administered questionnaire. Analysis was done using SPSS version 27, with descriptive and inferential statistics applied. Findings revealed generally good adherence, particularly in hand hygiene (65.6%), proper disposal of sharps (70.5%), and use of personal protective equipment (60.7%). Compliance was lower for equipment disinfection (56.6%) and isolation precautions (53.3%), with a grand mean of 3.47. Factors positively influencing practice included belief in patient safety (72.1%), continuous education (64.8%), and supervision (62.3%). Major barriers reported were overcrowding (61.5%), time constraints (58.2%), workload (57.4%), inadequate PPE (53.3%), and insufficient supervision (52.5%). A Chi-square test revealed a significant association between academic level and adherence (χ² = 6.481, df = 4, p = 0.039), with 300-level students showing higher compliance (68.2%) than 400-level (59.3%) and 500-level (53.3%) students. The study concludes that while nursing students demonstrate commendable infection control practices, gaps remain, highlighting the need for stronger institutional support, continuous education, and resource provision to sustain compliance.
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