
5 minute read
Washing with soap vs using hand sanitiser
Each year the Save Lives: Clean Your Hands global campaign aims to progress the goal of maintaining a global profile on the importance of hand hygiene and to congregate people in support of hand hygiene improvement around the world. For World Hand Hygiene Day 2021, celebrated on May 5, the World Health Organization (WHO) called on healthcare workers and facilities to achieve effective hand hygiene action at the point of care. This could not have been more relevant considering the mass rollout of vaccination campaigns in many countries. The article previously published in News Medical, offers valuable insight of the importance of hand hygiene, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Our hands can be a critical vector in the transmission of infectious organisms. Infectious viruses can persist on surface materials for several days and are easily transferred between surfaces and hands upon contact. When we touch our face, the infectious pathogens can enter the body through mucus membranes in our mouths, eyes and nose, and travel to the throat and lungs. Given that the average adult touches their face approximately 20 times per hour and is particularly likely to rub the nose or eyes, it is clear why hand hygiene has received renewed attention during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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What are the recommended preventative measures for COVID-19?
Practicing good hand hygiene is a simple preventative strategy that most people can easily undertake, and many studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of hand hygiene in preventing the transmission of infectious pathogens, including respiratory diseases. There is a vast array of different hand hygiene products on the market, many of which were in short supply globally at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic following a surge in demand from consumers.

Picture:Tork SA
Key times to clean hands
Pre-pandemic, public health systems have communicated that hand cleaning should take place before and after preparing and eating food; before and after wound treatment; after using the toilet; after touching animals; and after touching garbage. During the pandemic, it is recommended to also clean hands after touching your eyes, nose, mouth, or facemask; upon entering and leaving a public space; and after touching surfaces in public areas.
What are hand hygiene products?
Soap and water
Currently, the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advocates for handwashing with soap and water as the most effective way of preventing the spread of COVID-19, and have published the following guidelines for effective handwashing:
1. Wet hands thoroughly and apply soap. 2. Lather hands thoroughly, including backs of hands, between the fingers and under the nails. 3. Scrub hands for a minimum of twenty seconds. 4. Rinse hands well under running water. 5. Dry thoroughly using a clean towel or allow to air dry. Soap is an amphiphile, meaning it is a chemical compound that possesses both water-loving and fat-repelling (hydrophilic) and fat-loving, water-repelling (lipophilic) properties. Soap dissolves the lipid membrane surrounding the coronavirus particle, causing the virus to fall apart and die before it can enter a host cell and replicate.
Hand sanitiser
If you do not have access to handwashing facilities, the CDC recommends hand sanitiser containing a minimum of 60 percent alcohol to remove the SARS-CoV-2 virus. In 2019, the FDA ruled that a product can only be marketed as a hand sanitiser if it contains ethanol, benzalkonium chloride or isopropanol as the active agent. All three chemicals are types of alcohol that destroy pathogens in a similar manner to soap: the alcohol molecules bond with the pathogen’s lipid membrane and break the virus apart.
Which approach is better at preventing virus transmission?
Public health systems across the globe recommend thorough handwashing with soap and water as the first defence against disease transmission. People tend to spend time lathering and scrubbing which allows the soap enough time to break down the virus. Handwashing with soap also dislodges dead microbes and viral cells from the hands and washes them down the drain. This reduces the likelihood of infection via face-touching and reduces the possibility of cross-contamination of surfaces.
Crucially, handwashing reduces all forms of infectious pathogens and removes potentially dangerous chemicals such as pesticides from the hands. Whilst hand sanitiser kills germs, they remain on the hands. Sanitiser is also less effective against certain viruses and bacteria.
Hand sanitiser does however have an important role to play in preventing virus transmission when handwashing facilities are either unavailable or inconvenient to access. For this reason, alcohol-based hand sanitisers are used throughout various healthcare settings. Numerous studies have shown that the introduction of sanitisers in clinical settings significantly increases adherence to hygiene protocols among staff.
In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, hand sanitiser offers an accessible method for employing sanitising stations in public spaces such as supermarkets to help prevent transmission of the virus, for example through the touching of shopping carts and food packages.
Effective handwashing relies on access to a clean running water supply; therefore, hand sanitiser can prove a valuable disease prevention tool in populations with limited water supplies. In 2017, it was estimated that over a quarter of the world’s population does not have access to basic safe sanitation services.
Effectiveness depends on proper use
Regardless of the approach taken to hand hygiene, neither method will offer adequate protection against the spread of infectious pathogens if they are not used correctly. Taking the full twenty seconds to scrub the hands with soap during handwashing is critical, as this allows adequate time for the soap to dissolve the membrane surrounding the virus. It is also important to ensure that enough soap is used to create sufficient lather to cover all areas of both hands.
Hand sanitiser should be rubbed in thoroughly until the hands are dry and, again, this should take at least twenty seconds. A common mistake is using too little sanitiser to cover both hands which is likely a result of dispensers tending to release too little in a single pump. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends using at least a coin-sized drop.