Topic Overview
Hand-washing is a simple and effective way to help prevent
diseases, such as colds, flu, and food poisoning.
When to wash your hands
Washing hands:
- Often, especially during cold and flu (influenza) season, can reduce your risk of catching or
spreading a cold or the flu.
- Before and after preparing or serving
food reduces your risk of catching or spreading bacteria that cause food
poisoning. Be especially careful to wash before and after preparing poultry,
raw eggs, meat, or seafood.
- After going to the bathroom or changing
diapers reduces your risk of catching or spreading infectious diseases such as
salmonella or
hepatitis A.
Wash your hands after:
- Touching parts of your body that are not clean.
- Using the
bathroom.
- Coughing, sneezing, or using a handkerchief or disposable
tissue.
- Eating, drinking, or using tobacco (for example,
smoking).
- Handling soiled kitchen utensils or
equipment.
- Handling other soiled or contaminated utensils or
equipment.
- Handling or preparing foods, especially after touching
raw meat, poultry, fish, shellfish, or eggs.
- Changing diapers,
handling garbage, using the phone, shaking hands, or playing with pets.
Proper hand-washing
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend the
following steps for hand-washing:
- Wash your hands with running water and
soap.
- Rub your hands
together for at least 20 seconds.
- Pay special attention to your
wrists, the backs of your hands, between your fingers, and under your
fingernails.
- Leave the water running while you dry your hands on a
paper towel.
- Use the paper towel as a barrier between the faucet
and your clean hands when you turn off the water.
If soap and water are not available, use
gel hand sanitizers or alcohol-based hand wipes
containing 60% to 90% ethyl alcohol or isopropanol. Most supermarkets and
drugstores carry these products. Carry one or both with you when you travel,
and keep them in your car or purse.
If using the gel sanitizer, rub your hands until the gel is dry.
You don't need to use water. The alcohol in the gel kills the germs on your
hands.
Credits
|
By
|
Healthwise Staff |
|
Primary Medical Reviewer
|
E. Gregory Thompson, MD - Internal Medicine |
|
Specialist Medical Reviewer
|
Christine Hahn, MD - Epidemiology |
|
Last Revised
|
July 8, 2010 |