Why is hand hygiene so important?
Thousands of people die every day around the world from infections acquired while receiving health care. Hands are the main pathways of germ transmission during health care. Hand hygiene is therefore the most important measure to avoid the transmission of harmful germs and prevent health care-associated infections.
Any health-care worker, caregiver or person involved in direct or indirect patient care needs to be concerned about hand hygiene and should be able to perform it correctly at the right time.
Clean your hands by rubbing them with an alcohol-based formulation, as the preferred mean for routine hygienic hand antisepsis if hands are not visibly soiled. It is faster, more effective, and better tolerated by your hands than washing with soap and water. Wash your hands with soap and water when hands are visibly dirty or visibly soiled with blood or other body fluids or after using the toilet. If exposed to potential spore-forming pathogens is strongly suspected or proven, including outbreaks of Clostridium difficile, hand washing with soap and water is the preferred mean.
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Cooperation with the WHO
B. Braun is founding member of the Private Organisation for Patient Safety (POPS) of the World Health Organisation (WHO). The goal is to achieve a reduction in health-care associated infections through improvements in hand hygiene, based on the overall aim of the WHO Clean Care is Safer Care Programme. B. Braun is engaged to raise the awareness worldwide about the importance of hand hygiene.
Learn more on https://www.who.int/initiatives/private-organizations-for-patient-safety