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Hand hygiene is regarded as a primary measure for lowering the risk of infection transmission among patients and health care staff.
Hand hygiene treatments include the use of alcohol-based hand rubs (containing 60%-95% alcohol) and soap and water hand washing.
Handwashing is classified into three categories.
There are three types of handwashing: social handwashing, antiseptic handwashing, and surgical handwashing.
Handwashing with soap kills germs on the hands.
Because people routinely touch their eyes, nose, and mouth without realising it, this helps avoid infections.
Germs can enter the body through the eyes, nose, and mouth and cause illness.
The Global hand hygiene market accounted for $XX Billion in 2022 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2023 to 2030.
State of the world’s hand hygiene report launched on Global Handwashing Day.
The annual event known as Global Handwashing Day emphasises the value of regular handwashing with soap as a cost-efficient method of disease prevention and lifesaving.
‘The Future is at Hand – Let’s Move Forward Together’ is the theme.
The COVID-19 outbreak has made people all across the world aware of the importance of handwashing with soap is.
To enable civilization escape the COVID-19 shadow and forge a healthier and more robust future as the pandemic spreads, urgent investment in improved hand hygiene is required.
An interactive seminar in connection with Global Handwashing Day.
The occasion signifies the publication of the inaugural State of the World’s Hand Hygiene report.
The WHO and UNICEF study serves as a worldwide call to action to prioritise hand cleanliness in practise and policy.
This historic study gives multiple motivating instances of change across the SDG 6 accelerator areas, invites Member States and supporting organisations to action, and compiles the most recent statistics on hand hygiene to show the sector’s current position and identify lagging development.