"County Health Department staff are available to provide a presentation to your agency or organization about hand and respiratory hygiene to prevent disease. Please contact the health department at healthdept@co.somerset.nj.us for more information."

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Handwashing

Frequent handwashing is one of the best ways to prevent the spread of infectious diseases.

"County Health Department staff are available to provide a presentation to your agency or organization about hand and respiratory hygiene to prevent disease. Please contact the health department at healthdiv@co.somerset.nj.us for more information."

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the most important thing that you can do to keep from getting sick is to wash your hands.

By frequently washing your hands you wash away germs that you have picked up from other people, or from contaminated surfaces, or from animals and animal waste.

What happens if you do not wash your hands frequently?

You pick up germs from other sources and then you infect yourself when you

  • Touch your eyes
  • Or your nose
  • Or your mouth.

One of the most common ways people catch colds is by rubbing their nose or their eyes after their hands have been contaminated with the cold virus.

You can also spread germs directly to others or onto surfaces that other people touch. And before you know it, everybody around you is getting sick.

The important thing to remember is that, in addition to colds, some pretty serious diseases -- like hepatitis A, meningitis, and infectious diarrhea -- can easily be prevented if people make a habit of washing their hands.

 

When should you wash your hands?


You should wash your hands often. Probably more often than you do now because you can't see germs with the naked eye or smell them, so you do not really know where they are hiding.

It is especially important to wash your hands:

  • Before, during, and after you prepare food
  • Before you eat, and after you use the bathroom
  • After handling animals or animal waste
  • When your hands are dirty, and
  • More frequently when someone in your home is sick.

 


What is the correct way to wash your hands?

  • First wet your hands and apply liquid or clean bar soap. Place the bar soap on a rack and allow it to drain.
  • Next rub your hands vigorously together and scrub all surfaces.
  • Continue for 20 seconds or about the length of a little tune. It is the soap combined with the scrubbing action that helps dislodge and remove germs.
  • Rinse well and dry your hands.

It is estimated that one out of three people do not wash their hands after using the restroom. So these tips are also important when you are out in public.

Washing your hands regularly can certainly save a lot on medical bills. Because it costs less than a penny, you could say that this penny's worth of prevention can save you a $50 visit to the doctor.

 

Cited from the CDC’s National Center for Infectious Diseases

The following is a list of handwashing educational materials and websites available on the Internet:

 

Brochures, Flyers and Posters  

Clean Hands Save Lives! (flyer)*

Prevent Colds & Flu, New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services (flyer)*

The New Way to Get Cleaned, Minnesota Department of Health (flyer)*

The 10 Most Common Causes of Infection, University of Nebraska Cooperative Extension at Lancaster (flyer)*

Handwashing Brochure, Massachusetts Department of Public Health (brochure)*

Wash Your Hands, National Food Service Management Institute (web page)

Three Things You Can Do to Prevent Infection, JCAHO (brochure)*

Handwashing, Your Most Powerful Defense Against Infections, APIC

Hand Hygiene for Consumers, APIC

Rutgers Cooperative Extension: ‘Washing Away Misconceptions about Gloves and Handwashing’

Handwashing brochure, Somerset County Health Officials Association (brochure)*

Handwashing flyer, Somerset County Health Officials Association (flyer)*

 

Websites


CDC's 'Ounce of Prevention Campaign'

CDC Clean Hands Campaign
CDC National Center for Infectious Diseases: ‘An Ounce of Prevention: Keeps the Germs Away’
American Society for Microbiology, ‘Take Action: Clean hands Campaign’
Handwashing Information Web Page, Massachusetts Department of Public Health

Wash Your Hands

Why is handwashing so important? Kids Health for parents (Nemours Foundation)

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, 'Infection: Don't Pass It On" Campaign'

Sink Those Germs! University of Nebraska

 For health care workers:

 

Alcohol based Hand Rubs flyer [ PDF]*  

Hand Hygiene for Healthcare Workers, APIC 

Healthy Skin, An Ounce of Prevention for Your Front Line Defense, APIC

 

For children:

 

Lancaster County Health Department Handwashing Coloring Sheet [PDF]*

CDC/ DHHS Infection Protection: The Buzz on Scuzz

American Society for Microbiology, ‘Stalking the Mysterious Microbe!’

Save the Antibiotic

 

For food handlers:

 

NSF ‘Wash Your Hands’ Flyer (English/ Spanish) [PDF]*

‘Health Is In Your Hands’ Table Tent [ PDF]*

Foodsafety.gov

Wash Your Hands, National Food Service Management Institute

 

*If you do not have Adobe Acrobat Reader, click on the logo below to go to the Adobe site.

Acrobat Reader

  

 

 

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9/7/10 by SBC

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