'Your health is in your hands'

ANI  |  New Delhi [India] 

The World Organisation's (WHO) World Hand Day - a timely reminder of the role of careful hand-in enhancing the safety and quality of for all - will be marked on Saturday.

In particular, good hand is needed to prevent sepsis, a serious and potentially life-threatening condition that can result from the body's response to

"Globally, over 30 million patients are affected by every year, many of them in low- and middle-income countries. Should antimicrobial resistance advance, this number will increase. Enhanced hand hygiene in is, therefore, a pressing need, and is everyone's responsibility, from patients and health workers to administrators and policymakers," said Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, WHO

Five key areas demand action.

First, health workers should fully embrace the WHO-recommended 'five moments for hand hygiene'. This five-step formula requires health workers to their hands using an alcohol-based product for 20-30 seconds, or soap and water for 40-60 seconds, before touching a patient, before clean/aseptic procedures, after bodily fluid exposure, after touching a patient, and after touching patient surroundings.

Second, facility-based and control leaders should seize every opportunity to champion the importance of good hand hygiene. That can - and should - include communicating the critical importance of implementing WHO guidelines on hand hygiene to policymakers, hospital officers, administrators and health workers.

Third, health facility leaders and senior management should make hand hygiene a key quality monitoring indicator. Compliance with hand hygiene standards should be a core part of every health facility's control regimen, with areas of risk identified and solutions found as a matter of priority. As part of this, they should also sign up to WHO's global SAVE LIVES: Clean Your Hands campaign, which all health facilities can be a part of.

Fourth, ministries of health from across the Region should implement the 2017 resolution on sepsis, which makes improving the prevention, diagnosis and management of a critical imperative. As the resolution outlines, one of the best ways to tackle the problem is via good hand hygiene and the development of clear, country-wide guidelines on the issue.

And fifth, patient advocacy groups should continue to insist on the value of hand hygiene as a good in itself, as well as a way to drive down the occurrence of Importantly, that means advocating for the development and implementation of effective hand hygiene-related policies, as well as good hand hygiene practices among health workers.

"From patients to health workers, administrators to policymakers, we must appreciate and understand that clean hands save lives and are one of the most powerful ways to prevent infection and sepsis. Across the WHO South-Region, promoting hand hygiene is an imperative we must all prioritize and act on decisively," concluded Dr

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, May 04 2018. 16:55 IST