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2 Out of 3 Americans Don't Wash Hands

yeahright

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2 Out of 3 Americans Don't Wash Hands

Survey Finds Germany Is the Worst at Hand Washing
By Miranda Hitti
WebMD Medical News Reviewed By Louise Chang, MD
on Monday, August 28, 2006

Aug. 28, 2006 -- America's hand-washing habits might not be up to snuff - or sniffles, a new survey shows.

In the survey, two-thirds of Americans admit they might not always wash their hands properly. And the results aren't much better overseas.

The survey comes from the newly-formed Lysol Hygiene Council. Lysol's products include cleaners and disinfectants.

The survey included more than 8,000 people in eight countries: the U.S., U.K., Italy, Germany, United Arab Emirates, India, Malaysia, and South Africa.

Participants answered five questions about hygiene and the importance of washing their hands.

One question covered the best way to stop germs from spreading. Another asked about situations where good hygiene calls for hand washing.

The answers may make you want to think twice before shaking someone's hand.

Data on Dirty Hands


A thousand Americans participated, evenly split between men and women. All were at least 18 years old.

Here are the percentages who admitted they might not wash their hands properly in these situations:

After sneezing or coughing: 37%
After handling animals or pets: 27%
Before eating or handling food: 10%
After going to the toilet: 7%
A bit more than three in 10 said they wouldn't skip or skimp on hand washing in any of those situations. But the remaining 69% didn't make that clean-hands claim.

It's not that Americans don't know hand washing is important.

Two-thirds said hand washing is the best way to stop the spread of germs, and more than three-quarters said they had become more aware of hygiene's importance in the last few years.

Dirtiest Hands?


Dirty hands were more common in only one other survey country: Germany.

Only a quarter of German participants claimed to wash their hands properly in all of the situations mentioned above. And 13% said they might not wash after using a toilet.

Views on hygiene varied among countries.

For instance, the top picks among Indian participants for curbing the spread of germs at home were:

Regularly disinfect surfaces: 75%
Wash hands: 15%
Avoid kissing and close physical contact with friends and family: 11%
Prevent animals from entering the house: 10%
In Malaysia, about 15% said that in order to protect against fluflu they wouldn't travel abroad.

In South Africa, one in five surveyed said the best way to protect against flu is to avoid public places.

According to the CDC, the single best way to prevent flu is to get a flu vaccine each fall. Washing your hands is also important in preventing the spread of germs, notes the CDC's web site.

9 Tips for Clean Hands

If you need to brush up on your hand-washing, here are some tips from the CDC:

Wash your hands with soap and clean running water for 20 seconds.
Wet your hands with clean running water and apply soap.
Use warm water if available.
Rub hands together to make a lather and scrub all hand surfaces.
Continue rubbing hands for 20 seconds -- the time it takes to sing "Happy Birthday" twice.
Rinse hands well under running water.
Dry hands using a paper towel or air dryer.
If possible, use your paper towel to turn off the faucet.
If soap and water aren't available, use an alcohol-based product to clean your hands.
 
It makes you stronger...Screw being clean. I'm more worried about washing my hands before using the bathroom than after.


No one is worried about putting their hands on their Dilly than after?
 
There actually was a study linking increased cleanliness to rising asthma rates.....on the theory that lack of exposure to allergins as a child left the immune system in a state where it overreacted to those allergins when exposed to them in later life.
 
All I know is that i'm rarely sick and I owe that to the ****ed up conditions in the army when I ate. I drank water that smelled better than swamp water.
 
I agree, I think the lack of exposure to such germs is more harmful, in the long run, than constantly disinfecting everything.

If your body has never been exposed to a germ, allergen or whatever, how can it develop the antibodies to fight it off. We all become more ill and live shorter lives. Or we spend more money trying to fend off the unknown infection which makes all the pharmaceutical investors more money and gives the politicians more power... but I digress.

Theoretically, the musky pheromones are what turns chicks on anyways. Cleanliness and smelly soaps and colognes are the real culprits why us geeks can't get l--d by anyone other than our wives. That and the fact that mine said she would kill me or something to that effect.

Now, if I could only find the damn vacuum.
 
I like how when I use public bathrooms everybody washes their hands afterwards, so the other guys in the bathroom won't think your a dirtball.

I'm sure none of them do that at home.
 
I wake up in the morning, take a long shower and use soap on everything, including the goodies. The tuck said goodies into a nice clean pair of underwear. I then go about my day, touching all kinds of things that have been touched by others (door handles, railings, etc...). When I go to the bathroom I do not pee on myself. The way I see it, my hands are a hell of a lot more dirtier than my ****. I should be washing my hands before I piss, not after.

This could have been a good Seinfeld episode!
 
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