Do You Wash Your Hands the Right Way?

File this under gross news: Only five percent of people wash their hands the right way after they use the bathroom, according to an observational study recently published in Journal of Environmental Health.

In the study, trained observers from Michigan State University documented the hand-washing habits of 3,749 people in local public restrooms. What they found: Ninety-five percent of bathroom users didn’t wash their hands for 15 to 20 seconds, the length of time the CDC recommends to kill infection-causing germs. Even worse: A third didn’t bother to use soap, and 10 percent skipped washing their hands altogether. Ewww.

At least the worst offenders weren’t in the ladies’ room: Fifteen percent of men didn’t wash their hands at all, compared to the seven percent of women who skipped the sink. And only half of all men used soap, compared to 78 percent of women.

“People think their hands are cleaner than they are,” says lead investigator Carl Borchgrevink, PhD, associate professor at Michigan State University’s School of Hospitality Business. But the truth is, no matter how neatly you do your business, it’s tough to leave the bathroom with clean hands—mostly because it’s a high-traffic place, he says.

Depending on the type of bacteria living on the bathroom door, toilet handle, faucet, towel dispenser, and other communal surfaces you touch, icky germs—think E. coli and staphylococcus—can be incredibly easy to pick up. And once these bacteria get into your system (whether it’s from your touching your mouth or your sandwich—which ends up your mouth), they can cause infections or viruses, says Robert Klein, chief of the division of infectious diseases at St. Luke’s and Roosevelt Hospitals in New York City.

Your best defense is to lather up the right way, immediately after you use the restroom. That means using soap, which helps bacteria float off the skin, and scrubbing and rinsing thoroughly, which ensures that the buggers end up down the drain, says Borchgrevink. To really get rid of most of the bacteria, the entire process should take 20 seconds—about the length of time it takes to sing “Happy Birthday” twice.

Think you’re in the clear because you’re a hand sanitizer junkie? While alcohol-based formulas will kill surface bacteria, they don’t fully remove residue from food or other filth—and they also don’t touch the bacteria below the surface of that residue. Meaning? Hand sanitizer should be your backup plan; it’s smarter to suds up in the sink when you can.

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More from Women’s Health:
Your Step-by-Step Guide to Hand-Washing
6 Ways to Have Good Gym Hygiene
Your Purse Is as Germy as a Toilet

javahut healthy feed

Do You Wash Your Hands the Right Way?

File this under gross news: Only five percent of people wash their hands the right way after they use the bathroom, according to an observational study recently published in Journal of Environmental Health.

In the study, trained observers from Michigan State University documented the hand-washing habits of 3,749 people in local public restrooms. What they found: Ninety-five percent of bathroom users didn’t wash their hands for 15 to 20 seconds, the length of time the CDC recommends to kill infection-causing germs. Even worse: A third didn’t bother to use soap, and 10 percent skipped washing their hands altogether. Ewww.

At least the worst offenders weren’t in the ladies’ room: Fifteen percent of men didn’t wash their hands at all, compared to the seven percent of women who skipped the sink. And only half of all men used soap, compared to 78 percent of women.

“People think their hands are cleaner than they are,” says lead investigator Carl Borchgrevink, PhD, associate professor at Michigan State University’s School of Hospitality Business. But the truth is, no matter how neatly you do your business, it’s tough to leave the bathroom with clean hands—mostly because it’s a high-traffic place, he says.

Depending on the type of bacteria living on the bathroom door, toilet handle, faucet, towel dispenser, and other communal surfaces you touch, icky germs—think E. coli and staphylococcus—can be incredibly easy to pick up. And once these bacteria get into your system (whether it’s from your touching your mouth or your sandwich—which ends up your mouth), they can cause infections or viruses, says Robert Klein, chief of the division of infectious diseases at St. Luke’s and Roosevelt Hospitals in New York City.

Your best defense is to lather up the right way, immediately after you use the restroom. That means using soap, which helps bacteria float off the skin, and scrubbing and rinsing thoroughly, which ensures that the buggers end up down the drain, says Borchgrevink. To really get rid of most of the bacteria, the entire process should take 20 seconds—about the length of time it takes to sing “Happy Birthday” twice.

Think you’re in the clear because you’re a hand sanitizer junkie? While alcohol-based formulas will kill surface bacteria, they don’t fully remove residue from food or other filth—and they also don’t touch the bacteria below the surface of that residue. Meaning? Hand sanitizer should be your backup plan; it’s smarter to suds up in the sink when you can.

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More from Women’s Health:
Your Step-by-Step Guide to Hand-Washing
6 Ways to Have Good Gym Hygiene
Your Purse Is as Germy as a Toilet

javahut healthy feed

Do This With Your Hands to Relieve Stress

Ever feel so stressed you could pull your hair out, mindlessly stuff your face, or chomp away at your cuticles? Turns out there’s a way more productive way to relieve stress and put your hands to use using a technique that could also help you drop a few pounds and even nip that back pain in the bud.

Research shows that the Emotional Freedom Technique (a.k.a. EFT or tapping), a treatment which combines ancient Chinese acupressure with modern psychology, can reduce cortisol levels in the body and counteract the negative impact of stress by sending a calming signal to the amygdala (the part of our brain responsible for our fight or flight response).
You won’t need metal-toed shoes for this kind of tapping: It involves repetitive finger-tapping on acupressure points of the body (listed below) while repeating certain statements aloud.

“A regular tapping practice can create numerous physical and psychological benefits like increased circulation, deeper and more satisfying sleep, relaxation in muscles and joints, improved immune system function, digestion, and sports performance, and increased energy, mental clarity, and focus,” says Jessica Ortner, co-producer of The Tapping Solution, a documentary film that explores tapping.

Skeptical? The Women’s Health team was, too—but we were also intrigued. So we invited Ortner to our office in New York City to give us the deets.

Turns out that, although it remains unrecognized by the American Psychological Association, clinical trials, studies, and research show EFT can be effective for treating certain conditions like post-traumatic stress syndrome and stress. In fact, researchers at Griffith University found that tapping can even help you to lose weight (by focusing on particular foods you crave and thoughts and emotions related to overeating, you can actually reduce cravings in the short and long term!).

“For a relatively new technique, it is very widespread and used around the world–a recent Google search for EFT showed over 25,000 related videos on the topic,” says Ortner. Not to mention, the 2012 Tapping World Summit, an annual online event, attracted 500,000 participants.

Ortner showed the WH staff how to tap to relieve stress. “Tapping while experiencing or discussing a stressful event counteracts that stress and reprograms the response to it,” says Ortner, but it can also be done on a regular basis as a form of preventative self-care. Ortner says that the length of tapping time can vary greatly. “Some aspects of an issue can be cleared in minutes while others may take repeated sessions,” she says.

Here’s how to try EFT:

FIRST: Identify your tapping points.


THEN: Learn how to tap.

  1. Start by using the tip of your index and middle fingers to rhythmically tap the side of the hand point while saying the “setup statement” aloud (speaking out loud will help with focus):

    “Even though I have this problem [insert your particular problem, such as neck pain, stress from a deadline, or anxiety], I accept myself.”

    Repeat three times.

  2. Tap briefly on each of the other points in the order they are listed in above while you express how you feel aloud, as if you’re venting to a friend. It doesn’t matter what side of the body you tap or what you say, says Ortner.
  3. Once you’ve tapped on each of the points, take a deep breath to complete round one. Continue for as long as you’d like, or until you feel better.

Check out this video demonstration from Jessica Ortner for more on tapping.

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More from WH:
How Integrative Medicine Helps You Heal
Stress Relief Secrets
Acupuncture to Relieve Pain: Does It Work?

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