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Hand Washing CDC Guidelines For Effective Hand Washing “hand washing is the single most important procedure for preventing the spread of infection” Effective Hand Washing • Turn on the water (avoid using hot water) and use a generous amount of soap • Lather soap and scrub palms and backs of hands for at least 15-20 seconds • Be sure to wash wrists, in between fingers and under fingernails • Rinse soap off hands • Dry hands thoroughly with paper towel or forced warm air • Turn off faucet with paper towel Wash Your Hands • • • • • • • • • • • Before eating or preparing/serving food After using the bathroom After smoking After playing outside After handling pets Before and after touching someone who is sick Before and after performing invasive procedures Before and after wound care After handling garbage, dirty equipment, dirty utensils After removing gloves and between patient care and before changing tasks After blowing your nose, sneezing, coughing, touching your hair, face, clothing, eating • After touching contaminated surfaces Waterless Hand Cleaning • When using an alcohol-based hand rub, apply product (3-5 mL) to palm of one hand and rub hands together, covering all surfaces of hands and fingers until hands are dry. • If hands are visibly soiled, wash them with soap and water first, dry them, then apply waterless product as described. Cleaning Agents • Use regular soap, preferably from a pump dispenser. If bar soaps are used, they should be small and kept in a drainage rack. Antibacterial soap isn’t necessary and may contribute to the growing problem of antibiotic resistance. • Allergic contact dermatitis due to alcohol rubs is very uncommon, but with increasing use of such products it is likely that true allergic reactions will occasionally be encountered. • Alcohol-based hand rubs take less time to use than traditional hand washing. • Antimicrobial-impregnated towelettes are not as effective as washing with soap and water or using alcohol-based hand rubs. • Wash hands with non-antimicrobial soap and water or with antimicrobial soap and water if exposure to Bacillus anthracis is suspected or proven. The physical action of washing and rinsing hands is recommended because alcohols, chlorhexidine, iodophors and other antiseptic agents have poor activity against spores. Statistics for Hand Washing Efficacy • Nearly 22 million school days are lost annually due to the common cold • One study involving Detroit school children showed that scheduled hand washing, at least 4 times a day, can reduce gastrointestinal illness and related absences by more than 50% • 76 Million people get diarrhea and upset stomachs from improper hand hygiene every year • Diarrhea is second only to the common cold as a cause of lost working time, with about 25 days lost from work or school each year for every 100 Americans • 325,000 people will be hospitalized as a result of improper hand hygiene • 5,000 unnecessary deaths are related to improper hand hygiene Incentives for Hand Washing References • • • • • • • • • • Power Point presentation by Lydia Bartlett School Network for Absenteeism Prevention. (2003). Clean hand statistics. Retrieved from http://www.itsasnap.org/snap/statistics.asp Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Division of Epidemiology and Immunization. (2004). Did you wash your hands? Retrieved October 5, 2005 from www.gov/handwashing Massachusetts Medical Society. (2001). Good health is in your hands. Retrieved September 16, 2005 from www.massmed.org/ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (1985). Guideline for handwashing and hospital environmental control. Retrieved September 16, 2005 from www.phppo.cdc.gov Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2002). Guideline for hand hygiene in healthcare settings. Retrieved September 16, 2005 from www.cdc.gov Barrs, A. (n.d.). Handwashing: Breaking the chain of infection. Retrieved October 6, 2005 from www.infectioncontroltoday.com Massachusetts Department of Public Health. (2002). Handwashing fact sheet-English. Retrieved October 6, 2005 from www.mass.gov.dph/cdc/handwashing Centers for Disease Control. (2002). An ounce of prevention keeps the germs away. Retrieved September 16, 2005 from www.cdc.gov/ncidod/op/handwashing.htm Massachusetts Department of Public Health. (2004). Public health information sheet: Hand hygiene. Retrieved October 6, 2005 from www.state.ma.us/dph