Hand Hygiene - The Facts
Hands have good germs that your body needs to stay healthy. Hands can also have bad germs on them that make you sick.
Alcohol-based hand sanitizer kills most of the bad germs that make you sick.
Alcohol-based hand sanitizers kill the good and bad germs, but the good germs quickly come back on your hands.
Alcohol-based hand sanitizer does not create antimicrobial-resistant germs.
- Alcohol-based hand sanitizers kill germs quickly and in a different way than antibiotics.
Using alcohol-based hand sanitizers to clean your hands does not cause antimicrobial resistance.
Steps To Take
When residents and visitors should clean their hands
- Before touching your eyes, nose, or mouth.
- Before preparing or eating food.
- Before and after changing wound dressings or bandages.
- After using the restroom.
- After blowing your nose, coughing, or sneezing.
- After touching hospital surfaces such as bed rails, bedside tables, doorknobs, remote controls, or the phone.
How to clean hands -With an alcohol-based hand sanitizer:
- Put product on hands and rub hands together.
- Cover all surfaces until hands feel dry. This should take around 20 seconds.
How to clean hands - With soap and water:
- Wet your hands with warm water. Use liquid soap if possible. Apply a nickel- or quarter-sized amount of soap to your hands.
- Rub your hands together until the soap forms a lather and then rub all over the top of your hands, in between your fingers and the area around and under the fingernails.
- Continue rubbing your hands for at least 15 seconds. Need a timer? Imagine singing the "Happy Birthday" song twice.
- Rinse your hands well under running water.
- Dry your hands using a paper towel if possible. Then use your paper towel to turn off the faucet and to open the door if needed.
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