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Hand washing

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A young boy learning proper handwashing techniques with supervision — an important health practice!

Hand washing

Hand washing, also called hand hygiene, is cleaning your hands with soap and water to get rid of tiny germs like bacteria and viruses, as well as dirt and other things that might make you sick. Drying your hands after washing is important because wet hands can pick up germs more easily. If you don’t have soap and water, you can use hand sanitizer that has at least 60% alcohol in it, but only if your hands aren’t too dirty or greasy.

The World Health Organization says it’s best to wash your hands for at least 20 seconds before and after certain activities. This includes after using the toilet, after helping a child with diapers, before feeding a child, before eating, and before or after preparing food, especially raw meat, fish, or poultry. Good hand washing helps stop diseases from spreading.

Even when you can’t wash your hands or use sanitizer, you can clean them with clean ash and water, though this might not always work as well. It’s important to remember that washing your hands too often can dry out your skin. Using a moisturizing lotion can help keep your skin healthy, because dry skin can get damaged and make it easier for germs to get in.

Steps and duration

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggest a few simple steps to keep your hands clean:

  1. Wet your hands with warm or cold running water. Running water is best because standing water might have germs.
  2. Use soap to lather your hands well, including the backs, between your fingers, and under your nails. Soap helps wash away germs.
  3. Scrub for at least 20 seconds. This helps remove most germs.
  4. Rinse thoroughly under running water. Rinsing in a bowl can put germs back on your hands.
  5. Dry your hands with a clean towel or let them air dry.

It’s important to wash your hands well at certain times, like after using the toilet, after changing a child’s diapers, before eating, and before handling food. Also wash your hands after touching animals, garbage, or after coughing and sneezing.

Public health

Building a culture of handwashing with children can create a change in culture with widespread public health benefits.

Hand washing is very good for your health. It helps stop sicknesses like the flu and COVID-19. It can also help stop problems like diarrhea and breathing infections. In places without clean water and soap, learning to wash hands properly can help keep people healthy.

Sometimes, washing your hands too much can make your skin dry or itchy. But washing your hands with soap and water is a great way to stay healthy.

Substances used

Soap and detergents

Adding soap or detergents to water helps clean our skin. Soap breaks down tiny living things and washes away oils that hold dirt and germs.

Solid soap

Solid soap can sometimes hold tiny living things from past uses. But these are usually washed away with the soap foam. The CDC suggests using liquid soap with a hands-free dispenser is better.

Antibacterial soap

Antibacterial soaps are popular, but they may not be better than regular soap. Some contain ingredients that might not work as well as advertised.

Warm water

Hand disinfection procedure according to the German standard DIN EN 1500

Using warm water for washing hands does not kill germs better than cooler water. Warm water can irritate skin and uses more energy. The most important thing is to scrub well.

Antiseptics (hand sanitizer)

Main article: Hand sanitizer

When soap and water are not available, like when you’re out in public, you can use a hand sanitizer instead. It should have at least 60% alcohol to work well. Rub it all over your hands until dry to kill germs.

Hand sanitizers are good against bacteria but not as good against some viruses. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say soap and water are best, especially when hands are dirty. Hand sanitizers clean germs but do not wash away dirt.

Wipes

Hand sanitizing wipes can be used when soap and water are not available, like when traveling. They should have at least 60% alcohol.

Ash or mud

In places where soap is hard to get, people sometimes use ash or mud to clean their hands. The World Health Organization says ash or sand can be used when soap isn’t available. But it’s not clear if this works as well as soap.

Technologies and design aspects

Low-cost options when water is scarce

When clean water and soap are hard to find, there are simple ways to wash your hands. You can pour water from a container, like a jug or gourd. In places with few resources, people sometimes use ash.

A school girl using a Veronica Bucket in Ghana for handwashing

In areas with little water, such as schools or villages, people use clever tools called “tippy-taps.” A tippy-tap is a jug hung by a rope with a foot lever. It lets you pour a small amount of water over your hands with soap.

Advanced technologies

Companies have made new tools to help with hand washing. Some devices save water and soap, using much less than regular hand washing. Other tools use light to check if hands are clean after washing.

In important places, like hospitals or food factories, special washing cycles make sure hands are washed well. With computer help, these tools can track hand washing and give tips.

A nurse uses a smart hand washing device.

Drying with towels or hand driers

Further information: Hand dryer

Drying your hands properly is important after washing. Both paper towels and hand dryers work well. Health groups say drying hands completely helps stop germs, such as during illnesses like COVID-19.

A community handwashing facility in Rwanda with sinks for people of different heights. During the COVID-19 pandemic in Rwanda handwashing was part of a system of public health measures encouraged to reduce transmission.

Some people think paper towels are cleaner than electric hand dryers, especially in places like hospitals. Studies show paper towels may spread fewer germs than some hand dryers.

Accessibility

It’s important that everyone can use hand washing tools, no matter who they are. This includes thinking about age, whether someone has a disability, weather, and where the tools are placed. Good placement of taps, soap, and paths can help make hand washing easy for everyone.: 27 

Medical use

Doctors and nurses sometimes forget to wash their hands, which can spread sickness. In hospitals, washing hands is very important to keep everyone healthy. Special machines can remind people to wash their hands.

Washing hands in hospitals should take at least 15 seconds with soap and water. It’s important to clean everywhere, including under the fingernails. After washing, dry your hands well and use a paper towel to turn off the water. This helps keep hands clean.

There are five important times to wash your hands in hospitals: before helping a patient, after touching things in a patient’s room, after touching blood or body fluids, before doing clean medical work, and after helping a patient. Washing hands helps stop the spread of germs and keeps people safe.

Developing countries

In developing countries, washing hands with soap is a cheap and important way to stay healthy and even improve nutrition. But many places do not have clean water, soap, or places to wash hands at homes, schools, and workplaces. This makes it hard for everyone to wash their hands regularly. In rural Africa, for example, there are very few places to wash hands near toilets, even though it is possible to build simple washing stations. Sometimes, people just don’t wash their hands because it’s not a habit, even if they have soap and water.

Washing hands is part of a big global goal called Sustainable Development Goal 6. This goal aims to make sure everyone has clean sanitation and can wash their hands with soap and water by 2030. It especially focuses on helping women, girls, and people in tough situations.

Promotion campaigns

Encouraging people to wash their hands with soap can help leaders make better rules, teach others why it’s important, and change habits over time. To do this well, we need to watch and check how it’s working. Studies show that working with whole communities helps people wash their hands more, but ads and marketing campaigns are not as effective.

Poster used in Africa for raising awareness about hand washing after using the toilet with simple low-cost hand washing device

One good example is the “Three Star Approach” by UNICEF. This helps schools take simple and cheap steps to make sure students wash their hands with soap. When schools meet certain standards, they earn stars — from one to three. Building places to wash hands is part of campaigns to fight diseases and help children stay healthy.

Global Handwashing Day is another campaign to raise awareness and change behavior. There is also World Hand Hygiene Day on May 5th every year. This day was started by the World Health Organization in 2009 to teach people how important hand washing is, especially in hospitals and clinics. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, UNICEF encouraged people to wash their hands using a hand washing emoji.

Hand washing stands at a school in Mysore district, Karnataka, India

To make sure people use hand washing places, they should be easy to find, nice-looking, and well-kept. Small reminders and cues can also help people remember to wash their hands.

Cost effectiveness

Not many studies have looked at how affordable hand washing is in developing countries compared to how much it helps people stay healthy. But one review shows that encouraging people to wash hands with soap is much more affordable than other clean water and sanitation projects.

Cost-Effectiveness of Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene Promotion
InterventionCosts (US$/DALY)
Hand-pump or standpost94
House water connection223
Water sector regulation47
Basic sanitation – construction and promotion≤270
Sanitation promotion only11.2
Hygiene promotion3.4

History

Electronic sign inside a Washington Metro station during the COVID-19 pandemic

Doctors and nurses learned in the 1700s and 1800s that washing hands helps keep people healthy. They found it could stop sickness, especially for new mothers and soldiers who were hurt. Back then, many people thought sickness came from bad smells, not germs.

During sickness outbreaks like swine flu in 2009 and the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, countries told people to wash their hands with soap. This helped keep people from getting sick. Today, washing hands is a normal habit for many around the world.

Society and culture

The phrase "washing one's hands of" something means saying you don’t want to be responsible for it or involved in it. This idea comes from a story where a man named Pontius Pilate washed his hands after making a decision.

In a play by Shakespeare called Macbeth, a character named Lady Macbeth keeps washing her hands because she feels bad about things she and her husband did.

Images

A hand washing station with sanitizer dispensers in a hospital, reminding us to stay clean and healthy.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Hand washing, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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