Everyday hygiene, such as hand-washing, decreases the need for antibiotics by up to 30 %, helping to prevent daily deaths from antimicrobial resistance (AMR), reports a new study.

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Home and community hygiene needs to be taken more seriously to prevent infections and therefore reduce the need for antibiotics.
The study, published in the American Journal of Infection Control, explored the role of targeted hygiene in the home and everyday life settings to reduce antibiotic prescribing and its likely impact on antibiotic resistance.
It provides evidence that practicing hand hygiene in homes and community settings can prevent infections and therefore reduce the need for antibiotics.
One intervention study demonstrated a 30 percent reduction of antibiotic prescriptions for common respiratory infections in a group that used hand sanitizers compared with a control group.
The study also showed the increasing prevalence of multidrug-resistant bacteria in the home and community.
"With evidence to show that home and community hygiene urgently needs to be taken more seriously, it is time for the global community to collaborate and recognize that reducing the need for antibiotics is important," the researchers noted.
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