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Improve Hand Washing With Glowing Gel

by Tanya Thomas on Jun 18 2011 11:52 PM

 Improve Hand Washing With Glowing Gel
A study has found that using a glowing gel that shows kids how well they wash their hands by highlighting bacteria they missed while washing could significantly improve hand hygiene.
What makes this particular intervention unique is where it was performed: a children's hospital emergency department waiting room.

"Waiting for the doctor is usually a tiresome and unproductive experience, but we were able to turn the waiting room into an interactive education centre to help kids improve their hand hygiene," Dr. Anna Fishbein, a physician and researcher at Northwestern University's Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago, and the study's lead author, said.

The researchers recruited 60 paediatric patients waiting to be seen by a doctor to participate in the study, which involved the application of Glo Germ Gel to the kids' hands.

Under a black light, the gel creates a yellow glow in areas where dirt and germs are present. After seeing the dirty spots, the participants were asked to wash their hands with soap and water as they normally would.

After washing, the researchers put the black light over the kids' hands again, revealing the spots they had missed when washing. The hands were rated both before and after washing on a four-point cleanliness scale from "very dirty" to "very clean."

Following the test, about half the children were given a brief lesson in hand washing technique, while the others received no additional education. All the kids were then asked to return two to four weeks later to repeat the test.

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During the follow up appointment, 77 percent of the original participants returned to have their hand washing re-evaluated. Researchers found that every child who returned scored significantly better on the cleanliness scale, regardless of whether they received hand-washing education.

Proper hand washing technique includes the duration of washing lasting at least 20 seconds, cleaning each hand completely, including between fingers and washing fingernails.

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"We found that using the gel alone to illustrate the areas of hands that may not be getting clean, even without verbal education, improves children's hand hygiene," Dr. Mary Groll, also of Children's Memorial and the study's principal investigator, said.

"Considering the importance of hand hygiene in disease prevention, the implications of this study will have lasting impact in this community's effort to decrease the spread of illness.

"This intervention is effective for improving children's handwashing ability, even without specific hand hygiene education," Groll added.

The study has been published in the July issue of Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, the journal of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America.

Source-ANI


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