Tag-Archive for ◊ Hand washing ◊

Author:
• Friday, July 09th, 2010

Why perform hand hygiene?

Hand hygiene is a simple habit for sanitation. Yet hand hygiene when done properly is the best way to prevent infections from spreading. Throughout the day you accumulate germs* on your hands from a variety sources, such as direct contact with people and animals, or contaminated surfaces. If you do not perform hand hygiene properly, you can infect yourself with these germs by touching your eyes, nose or mouth. You can also spread these germs through contacting with others or touching other surfaces.

Who should perform hand hygiene?

Hand hygiene should be part of everyone’s daily routines. You should always perform and remind your family members or people around to perform hand hygiene as well.

When to perform hand hygiene?

Although it is not possible to keep your bare hands germ-free, there are times when it is critical to clean your hands to limit the number and the spread of germs.

Always remember to clean your hands in the following situations:

Personal Hygiene:

1. Before touching the eyes, nose and mouth

2. Before eating or handling food

3. After using the toilets

4. After blowing nose, sneezing or coughing

After contacting or handling contaminated or dirty materials:

1. After changing diapers or handling soiled articles from children or the sick

2. After touching animals, poultry or their droppings

3. After handling garbage

4. After touching public installations or equipment, such as escalator handrail, elevator control panels or door knobs

Others:

1. Before and after visiting hospitals, residential care homes or caring for the sick

2. Any time you find your hands dirty

How to perform hand hygiene?

You should clean hands with liquid soap and water when visibly soiled or likely contaminated with body fluid. When hands are not visibly soiled, clean them with 70-80% alcohol-based hand-rub is also effective.

Steps for hand hygiene

a) Clean hands with liquid soap and water:

1. Wet hands under running water.

2. Apply liquid soap and rub hands together to make a soapy lather.

3. Away from the running water, rub the palms, back of hands, between fingers, back of fingers, thumbs, finger tips and wrists. Do this for at least 20 seconds.

4. Rinse hands thoroughly under running water.

5. Dry hands thoroughly with a clean cotton towel, a paper towel, or a hand dryer.

6. The cleaned hands should not touch the water tap directly again. The tap may be turned off:

? by using the towel wrapping the faucet; or

? after splashing water to clean the faucet.

Please note:

? Never share towels.

? Dispose of used paper towel properly.

? Store personal towels properly and wash them at least once daily. Preferably, prepare more towels for frequent replacement.

b) Clean hands with alcohol-based hand-rub:

1. Apply a palmful of alcohol-based hand-rub and cover all surfaces of the hands.

2. Rub the palms, back of hands, between fingers, back of fingers, thumbs, finger tips and wrists.

3. Rub for at least 20 seconds until the hands are dry.

* Germs include bacteria, viruses and other microbes

Author:
• Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Is your body vulnerable to disease? It could be as many germs are there in the body and bad habits are hard to break.

Usually there are many factors that causes the body easily infestation of disease germs, among them are bad habits that you live. Although they seem trivial but can be fatal to your health.

It’s good to stop bad habit. What bad habits that can cause disease? Here they are:

1. Not washing hands after using the toilet.

Maybe you’ve heard if the ‘sterile urine’ because you think it does not need to wash their hands after urination. While it is true but you still have to wash your hands thoroughly.

There are other activities such as wiping, rinsing, and touched the door handle – all of that can cause cross contamination of germs that make the body vulnerable to illness.

2. Trying food samples in grocery stores.

For the same reason, you don’t want to touch and even eat food that may have touch by other hands that not necessarily clean. Because it you shouldn’t put your hand into a bowl or jar of food samples offered at stores or supermarkets.

3. Covering a cough with your hands.

Most people cover coughs with both hands. If you tend to do this, try to do it any other way. When you cough or cover with arm right angle and not your hands. This way more polite also helps protect other people who have weak immune systems from disease germs are spread when you cough.

4. Frequent eye rubbing

Try to think that both your eyes as something sacred and untouchable. Train yourself to not touch it with your fingers and don’t mess with scrub or eye makeup, at least until you wash your hands first. Once you touch the eyes with dirty hands, then you immediately distribute all kinds of harmful bacteria and various viruses, which can cause serious infections and disturbing.

5. Touched and licked ordinary pets.

Make sure you always wash your hands every time you touch and close with your pet it. Because the saliva or feces of animals released were not only repugnant but also carry harmful bacteria such as MRSA can be transmitted to you.