The effect of timers and precommitments on handwashing: a randomised controlled trial in a kitchen laboratory

James Thom, Sarah Bowen, Yuchen Yang, Sanjeev Devarajan, Helen Doran, Marios Zampetis, Trisevgeni Papakonstantinou, Maria Mcdonagh,Robert Mcphedran,Ben Toombs, Ayla Ibrahimi Jarchlo, Alice Rayner, Philip Jones,Natalie Gold

BEHAVIOURAL PUBLIC POLICY(2024)

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摘要
Many foodborne illness outbreaks originate in food service establishments. We tested two behavioural interventions designed to improve the duration and quality of handwashing. We ran a three-armed parallel trial in a laboratory kitchen, from 7 March to 27 May 2022. Participants were n = 195 workers who handle food. We randomly allocated participants to three groups: Timer - tap-mounted timer that counted seconds while participants washed their hands; Precommitment - agreed to five statements on good hand hygiene before attending the kitchen; and Control. Participants completed a food preparation task under time pressure. Cameras focused on the sink captured handwashing. Outcome measures were number of times participants washed their hands; number of times they washed their hands using soap; number of times they washed using soap and washed the backs of their hands; and mean duration of handwashing attempts using soap. Participants in Timer washed their hands for 1.9 s longer on average than Control (beta = 2.20, 95% CI = 0.34-4.06, p = 0.021). Participants in Precommitment washed their hands for 2.5 s longer on average than Control (beta = 2.30, 95% CI = 0.33-4.27, p = 0.022). We found no statistically significant differences on any other outcome measure.
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关键词
Behavioural intervention,food safety,hand hygiene,handwashing,precommitments
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