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If
you don't want to fall ill this Christmas,
then share a festive kiss but don't shake
hands
The fight against all
types of infections, from colds and flu to
stomach bugs and MRSA, begins at home, with
good hand hygiene, says first review of hand
hygiene in the community
We've all heard people
say 'I won't kiss you, I've got a cold'. But
a report just published warns that we may be
far more at risk of passing on an infection
by shaking someone's hand than in sharing a
kiss.
A group of hygiene
experts from the United States and the UK
have published the first detailed report on
hand hygiene in the home and community,
rather than in hospital and healthcare
settings.
Their findings are
published in the American Journal of
Infection Control. They say that, if we want
to avoid catching flu or tummy bugs, or
protect ourselves and others from organisms
such as MRSA, salmonella or C. difficile,
then we have to start in our own homes, by
paying greater attention to good hand
hygiene.
They also warn that, in
the event of a flu pandemic, good hand
hygiene will be the first line of defence
during the early critical period before mass
vaccination becomes available.
This new report follows
on from a study published last month in the
British Medical Journal which indicated that
physical barriers, such as regular
handwashing and wearing masks, gloves and
gowns may be more effective than drugs in
preventing the spread of respiratory viruses
such as influenza and SARS.
Good hygiene at home
prevents organisms spreading from one family
member to another. By reducing the number of
carriers in the community, the likelihood of
infections being carried into health care
facilities by new patients and visitors is
reduced.
Good hygiene at home also means
fewer infections, which means fewer patients
demanding antibiotics from the GP, and fewer
resistant strains developing and circulating
in the community.
Cold and flu viruses
can be spread via the hands so that family
members become infected when they rub their
nose or eyes. The report details how germs
that cause stomach infections such as
salmonella, campylobacter and norovirus can
also circulate directly from person to
person via our hands.
If we put our fingers
in our mouths, which we do quite frequently
without being aware of it, or forget to wash
our hands before preparing food, then
stomach germs can also be passed on via this
route.
Some of us also carry
MRSA or C.difficile without even knowing,
which can be passed around via hand and
other surfaces to family members or, if they
are vulnerable to infection, go on to become
ill.
Professor Sally
Bloomfield, one of the report’s authors, is
the Chairman of the International Scientific
Forum for Home Hygiene, the international
organisation which produced report. She is
also a member of the London School of
Hygiene & Tropical Medicine’s Hygiene
Centre.
She comments: 'With the colds and
flu season approaching, it's important to
know that good hand hygiene can really
reduce the risks. What is important is not
just knowing that we need to wash our hands
but knowing when to wash them.
Preventing
the spread of colds and flu means good
respiratory hygiene, which is quite
different from good food hygiene. That's why
the new respiratory hygiene campaign from
the Department of Health in the UK, which
advises people to "catch it, bin it, kill
it", is spot on'.
The authors say that
breaking the chain of infection from one
person to another all depends on how well we
wash our hands. If we don't do it properly,
washing with soap and rinsing under running
water, then we might as well not do it at
all.
They recommend also using an alcohol handrub in situations where there is high
risk, such as after handling raw meat or
poultry, or when there is an outbreak of
colds or stomach bugs in the family home or
workplace, or if someone in the family is
more vulnerable to infection.
They suggest
carrying an alcohol rub or sanitiser at all
times so that good hand hygiene can still be
observed away from home in situations where
there is no soap and water available.
Carol O'Boyle, of the
School of Nursing, University of Minnesota,
and a co-author of the report, says: 'Hand
hygiene is just as important when we are
outside the home - on public transport, in
the office, in the supermarket, or in a
restaurant. Quite often it's not possible to
wash our hands in these situations, but
carrying an alcohol-based hand sanitizer
means we can make our hands hygienic
whenever the need arises'.
The report warns that
good hygiene is about more than just washing
our hands. Although the hands are the main
superhighway for the spread of germs –
because they are the ‘last line of defence’,
surfaces from which the hands become
contaminated, such as food contact surfaces,
door handles, tap handles, toilet seats and
cleaning cloths also need regular hygienic
cleaning. Clothing and linens, baths, basin
and toilet surfaces can also play a part in
spreading germs between family members in
the home.
Professor Elaine
Larson, of the Mailman School of Public
Health in New York and another co-author,
says: ‘Because so much attention has been
paid to getting people to wash their hands,
there is a danger that people can come to
believe this is all they need to do to avoid
getting sick’.
Professor Bloomfield
concurs. 'We hear a lot of discussion about
whether being "too clean" is harming our
immune systems, but we believe that this
targeted approach to home hygiene, which
focuses on the key routes for the spread of
harmful organisms, is the best way to
protect the family from becoming ill whilst
leaving the other microbes which make up our
environment unharmed'.
Dr. Val Curtis, Head of
the London School of Hygiene & Tropical
Medicine's Hygiene Centre concludes: 'Handwashing
with soap is probably the single most
important thing you can do to protect
yourselves and your loved ones from
infection this Christmas'
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