National Hand Washing Awareness Week – Why It Works

By Steve Lorberbaum 1  pm On

If you want to craft a battle plan to prevent colds, you don’t have to think long and hard about it. Just remember three simple words: Wash your hands!

There’s no secret in why that works. It’s all due to the way colds spread.

How You Get Infected

The main way colds get passed around is when someone who’s sick coughs or sneezes. Little droplets with germs land on places like doorknobs, telephones, and computer keyboards. Or the sick person coughs or sneezes into their hands and then touches those objects.

Then you come along, happy and healthy, and touch that spot. Next, without even realizing it, you might touch your nose and mouth. Voila! In an instant you’re infected.

Why Hand Washing Works

Some viruses — tiny living things that cause colds — can live on surfaces for hours. Regular hand washing is your best strategy to keep them from getting inside your body. And of course, if you’re the one who’s sick, washing up will keep you from spreading your germs.

There’s some evidence behind this. A program called Operation Stop Cough was started at a military recruit training command center in Illinois. As part of the program, recruits were told to wash their hands at least five times a day. After 2 years, the hand-washing team reported 45% fewer cases of respiratory illness, compared with sickness rates among recruits during the year before the program started.

Request a free Consultation

    By providing a telephone number and submitting the form you are consenting to be contacted by SMS text message (our message frequency may vary). Message & data rates may apply. Reply STOP to opt-out of further messaging. Reply HELP for more information. See our Privacy Policy.

    Please prove you are human by selecting the star.

    Recent Post

    Why Do Aging Adults Living Alone Have Difficulty Staying Motivated?

    Can Home Care Detect and Prevent Silent Health Emergencies?

    What Are the Benefits of Meal Preparation Services in In-Home Care?

    How Can a Caregiver Best Support a Loved One with Dementia or Alzheimer’s?

    How Can You Help a Dementia Patient Transition Through the Stages of the Disease?