Preparing for the New Age of Hand Washing

Preparing for the New Age of Hand Washing

Bradley Corporation just released new data on hand washing habits, and it’s clear that news coverage, signage and restroom preparedness has prompted better handwashing behavior.

We hear it constantly-especially during the current pandemic: “wash your hands often.”

You might not realize the benefits of washing your hands and why it is one of the best ways to protect yourself against germs like the flu, a cold or the coronavirus. Industrial safety equipment and commercial plumbing manufacturer, Bradley Corporation, has conducted a number of surveys on hand-washing across the country, and it is continuing to do so.

Its recent studies have helped better understand Americans’ hand washing habits with a number of focuses: demographic differences, trends, effectiveness and comparison to hand-sanitizer. OH&S has published much of its content, with articles like Bradley Corporation Shares Hand Washing Habits Across the United States and Bathroom Hand-Washing and Flu 2020: What You Could Be Doing.

If there’s any good news about the coronavirus, it might be that people awareness about hygiene and germ control is increasing. The following is another, new news release from Bradley Corporation—discussing the ways the coronavirus, and other outbreaks, have caused Americans to wash their hand more often and more thoroughly.

Preparing for the New Age of Hand Washing

News coverage, signage and restroom preparedness prompt hand washing behavior

Menomonee Falls, WI (April 3, 2020) – If there is some good news in the age of coronavirus, research from the Healthy Hand Washing Survey shows that during the past 11 years an increasing number of Americans are heeding the message about washing their hands to protect themselves from flu outbreaks. The question then becomes: Are facilities equipped to support hand washing as people return to their regular public activities?

11-year uptick in U.S. hand washing habits

In 2009, the year H1N1 hit the United States, only 45 percent of Americans said they washed their hands more frequently or thoroughly in response to flu virus outbreaks. By 2019, the number of flu-fighting hand washers in the U.S. had risen to 79 percent.

A national focus on outbreaks does have an effect on hand hygiene. Fifty percent of Americans say news coverage of cold and flu outbreaks has a “very large” or “somewhat large” impact on their hand washing behavior. Women and their hand washing habits are more likely to be impacted by news coverage than men (53 percent vs. 47 percent).

“The steady rise in hand washing diligence in America may, in part, stem from several stand-out flu seasons over the past decade—particularly flu outbreaks in 2009, 2015 and 2018,” says Jon Dommisse, director of strategy and corporate development for Bradley Corp. “Now, the unprecedented spread of coronavirus has placed an even more intense spotlight on the critical nature of thorough hand washing with soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

“Hand washing in public facilities will be exceedingly important in the coming weeks and months as people return to workplaces, offices, schools, restaurants, stores and other gathering places,” Dommisse said. “It’s essential we take advantage of every opportunity to wash our hands whether we are at home or in public.”

Hand washing in a new era

According to 11 years of Healthy Hand Washing Survey findings, the following actions encourage hand washing in public restrooms:

  • Hand washing signage. Almost 40 percent of Americans say they’re more likely to wash their hands after seeing a sign that requires employees to wash before returning to work.
  • Clean and stocked restrooms. The top two reasons Americans don’t wash their hands after using a public restroom are lack of soap or paper towels (34 percent) and restroom sinks that are dirty or not working (21 percent). In addition, 85 percent of Americans say they hurry to get out of a restroom if the conditions are unpleasant.
  • Touchless hand washing fixtures. While keeping them cleaner and better stocked is Americans’ most desired improvement in restrooms, making everything touchless is next on their wish list. People go out of their way to avoid contact with germs in restrooms. Sixty-five percent use a paper towel to eliminate hand contact with doors and faucets and 44 percent of people operate toilet flushers with their foot.

“Hand washing in America has undoubtedly improved over the past 11 years but coronavirus is a real hand washing game changer,” Dommisse said. “We must all remember that hand washing is among the most important actions to protect our loved ones, our communities and ourselves.”

Bradley Corp. is a leading manufacturer of commercial plumbing fixtures, washroom accessories, restroom partitions, emergency fixtures and solid plastic lockers. For more information, visit www.bradleycorp.com/handwashing.

For almost 100 years, Bradley has created the most complete and advanced commercial washrooms and comprehensive solutions that make industrial environments safe.Bradley is the industry's leading source for multi-function hand washing and drying fixtures, accessories, partitions, solid plastic lockers, as well as emergency safety fixtures and electric tankless heaters for industrial applications. Headquartered in Menomonee Falls, Wis., USA, Bradley serves commercial, institutional and industrial building markets worldwide. For more information visit https://www.bradleycorp.com.

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