Healthcare-acquired infections remain a critical challenge in hospital settings, with hand hygiene representing the most effective preventive measure. Despite this established knowledge, global compliance rates average only 38.7%. Traditional supervision methods such as direct observation and manual feedback have proven to be resource-intensive and susceptible to bias. Often, they create barriers to behavioural change especially in resource scare settings such as labour rooms in hospitals.
The SafeHands project employed human-centered design to understand this implementation gap and explore how AI could support hand hygiene compliance in Indian public hospitals. Implemented between June 2021 and June 2022, the initiative installed an AI-enabled system called VajraHands (developed by DataKalp) across seven district and sub-district hospitals in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, and Madhya Pradesh.








