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If you read the study (Skin tolerance and effectiveness of two hand decontamination procedures in everyday hospital use, Winnefeld, Richard, Drancourt and Grob, British Journal of Dermatology, Vol 143, Issue3, 2008) you will better understand why the authors came to this conclusion. To quote: “Moreover, after 40% of the hand washes with soap, contaminant micro-organisms were isolated, which had not been present before, Serrtia marcesens, Acinetobacter sp., Enterobacter sp., Citrobacter so. Were isolated in eight, three, four one and three cases respectively. Yeasts were retrieved once. Contamination occurred only in 10% of the evaluated alcohol-based hand rinses. Acinetobacter appeared three times, Enterobacter sp. Once and Staphylococcus aureus once.” A similar conclusion was reach in Chamberlain, Halablab, Gould, Miles, Distribution of bacteria on hands and the effectiveness of brief and thorough decontamination procedures using non-medicated soap. Zbl Bakt 1997, 285, 565-75. In addition, in a review article in the International Journal of Cosmetic Science (Hand hygiene compliance and irritant dermatitis: a juxtaposition of healthcare issues, March 2012) the authors found that the irritant effect of hand washing damaged the skin barrier. “Irritated hands had significantly more colony-forming units than normal hands. Total bacteria counts were higher as skin damage increased.” And from the WHO: “The study revealed that touching intact areas of moist skin transferred enough organisms to the nurses’ hands to allow subsequent transmission to catheter material despite handwashing with plain soap and water; by contrast, alcohol-based handrubbing was effective and prevented crosstransmission to the device.” – WHO Guidelines on Hand Hygiene in Health Care, page 22 These are just examples that show that the whole topic of hand hygiene, or rather hand decontamination, is not quite as simple as many assume. If you need more PM me with contact details and I will respond.
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4 users thanked chris.packham for this useful post.
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