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COVID-19

National Handwashing Awareness Week

December 2, 2020

National Handwashing Awareness Week runs December 1 thru December 7, 2020. 

Personal hygiene begins and ends with our hands. And though we’re taught as youngsters to wash our hands before dinner, it’s important to remember that germs don’t care what time of day it is. Clean hands prevent sickness - including COVID-19. So it’s especially important to learn the basics about hand hygiene so that you, too, can become a champion hand washer!

Experts recommend washing your hands with soap and clean water for at least 20 seconds. Be sure to get a good lather going and clean the back of the hands, between the fingers and under the nails. Dry them using a clean towel. There is a lot of science behind these recommendations, so be sure to follow them each time you wash your hands.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls hand washing "a do-it-yourself vaccine" and suggests remembering five easy steps: Wet, lather, scrub, rinse, dry.

Endorsed by the American Medical Association and American Academy of Family Physicians, the four principles of hand awareness are:

1) Wash your hands when they are dirty and before eating.

2) Do not cough into hands. 

3) Do not sneeze into hands. A typical human sneeze exits the body at about 200 miles per hour and emits around 40,000 droplets into the air.

4) Don't put your fingers in your eyes, nose or mouth. Think of how many different things we touch during the course of an average day. Now imagine how many of those things were touched by other people's hands. Yuck! Wash your hands to prevent the spread of dangerous microbes. 

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, handwashing can prevent 1 in 3 diarrhea-related illnesses and 1 in 5 infections, including the flu. About 1.4 million children under age 5 die from diarrheal diseases and pneumonia — the two most deadly afflictions for children worldwide.

The CDC also reports that only 31 percent of men and 65 percent of women washed their hands after using a public restroom.

And happy hands make for happy and healthy homes. Using antibiotics creates antibiotic resistance. Handwashing prevents many sicknesses, so people need less antibiotics. Therefore, less antibiotic resistance.

So let's all together - SCRUB DOWN!

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