Hand Sanitizer Use Safe, Despite Internet, Media Hype
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Three simple words give perspective to Internet and media-fueled hype on alcohol-based hand sanitizers: Use as directed. In recent weeks, a flurry of local TV news stories – based on chain e-mails and random Internet postings – have reported on isolated cases of accidental or improper ingestion of hand sanitizers, some involving children.
The Soap and Detergent Association (SDA), which represents manufacturers of cleaning products and their ingredients, says much of this coverage ignores the fact that alcohol-based hand sanitizers are used safely and effectively by millions of people every single day.
“This entire discussion needs a good dose of common sense,” said Nancy Bock, the SDA’s vice president of education and 2007-2008 chair of the National Poison Prevention Week Council. “Simply put, hand sanitizers are safe when used as directed.”
That point is further verified by poison control experts.
“It is most unlikely that accidental poisoning would occur in a child who licked their hands after application of hand sanitizer gel,” says S. Rutherfoord Rose, PharmD, FAACT, associate professor of emergency medicine and director of the VirginiaPoisonCenter in Richmond. “Most of the alcohol contained in these products evaporates into the air upon application.”
“It should be noted that illicit or other inappropriate use, including intentional ingestion, can result in signs and symptoms of alcohol intoxication. Therefore it is recommended that manufacturers’ directions for use be followed,” Rose added.
Bock notes that hand sanitizers play a vital role in helping to prevent the spread of germs that can make us sick. “Hand sanitizers – whether they are alcohol-based or not – are part of regular hand hygiene routines, especially when individuals are not near soap and water. These products are used safely and effectively in homes, schools, child care centers, offices, hospitals, and healthcare facilities – every single day,” she said.
Bock added, “When isolated examples of misuse of hygiene products are reported, common sense needs to prevail. The key, as with any consumer product, is to read the label instructions carefully and follow the directions. Keep hand sanitizers out of the reach of small children. Store the product properly. Overly restrictive limits or outright bans on product availability ignore the valuable role these products already play in ensuring good health practices, as well as their excellent safety profile.”
Studies show good hand hygiene practices can reduce illness, absenteeism and associated costs by up to 50 percent. Ahead of the next cold and flu season, Deb SBS has launched a program called “Infection Control in the Workplace” to provide added weapons in the fight against microbes. Hand sanitizers and stand-alone dispensers are key elements in the infection control program. ...
Some students are wearing surgical masks on the University of Michigan campus and in the dormitories starting this week as the second year of the M-Flu study gets underway, now that the first confirmed flu case hit campus. Students from four dormitories on the Ann Arbor campus volunteered to participate in the study, which looks at the efficacy and feasibility ...
AUSTIN, Texas -- As Infection Prevention Week (October 14-20) begins across the country, Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports, is calling on hospitals nationwide to disclose their handwashing compliance rates. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) considers proper hand hygiene to be the single most important factor in protecting patients from hospital-acquired infections, which kill ...
When it comes to washing with soap and water, some Americans seem be slipping up. In an observational study sponsored by the American Society for Microbiology (ASM) and the Soap and Detergent Association (SDA), slightly over three-quarters of men and women (77 percent) washed their hands in public restrooms – a six percent decline from a similar study conducted in ...
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Three simple words give perspective to Internet and media-fueled hype on alcohol-based hand sanitizers: Use as directed. In recent weeks, a flurry of local TV news stories – based on chain e-mails and random Internet postings – have reported on isolated cases of accidental or improper ingestion of hand sanitizers, some involving children. The Soap and ...
Bacteria and viruses are the microscopic organisms – otherwise known as germs -- that are responsible for causing and transmitting illness and disease. These microbes are so small, that according to the American Society for Microbiology, if the smallest of all microbes was the size of a baseball, an average bacterium would then be the size of the pitcher's mound, and just one of the millions of cells that make up your body would be the size of the ballpark!