The main thing we
can do to prevent all illnesses is promote hand hygiene. It’s
important right now that we reinforce proper hand washing with
students. Below is some information from the Centers for Disease
Control about stopping the spread of germs. The school nurses will
be working to promote hand hygiene in your schools.
How Germs Spread
The main way that
illnesses like colds and flu are spread is from person to person in
respiratory droplets of coughs and sneezes. This is called "droplet
spread."
This can happen when
droplets from a cough or sneeze of an infected person move through
the air and are deposited on the mouth or nose of people nearby.
Sometimes germs also can be spread when a person touches respiratory
droplets from another person on a surface like a desk and then
touches his or her own eyes, mouth or nose before washing their
hands. We know that some viruses and bacteria can live 2 hours or
longer on surfaces like cafeteria tables, doorknobs, and desks.
How to Stop the Spread of Germs
In a nutshell: take
care to
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Cover your mouth and nose
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Clean your hands often
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Remind your children to
practice healthy habits, too
Cover your
mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing
Cough or sneeze into a
tissue and then throw it away. Cover your cough or sneeze if you do
not have a tissue. Then, clean your hands, and do so every time you
cough or sneeze.
The "Happy
Birthday" song helps keep your hands clean?
Not exactly. Yet we
recommend that when you wash your hands -- with soap and warm water
-- that you wash for 15 to 20 seconds. That's about the same time it
takes to sing the “Happy Birthday” song twice!
Alcohol-Based
Hand Wipes and Gel Sanitizers Work Too
When soap and water are
not available, alcohol-based disposable hand wipes or gel sanitizers
may be used. You can find them in most supermarkets and drugstores.
If using gel, rub your hands until the gel is dry. The gel doesn't
need water to work; the alcohol in it kills the germs on your
hands.*
* Source: FDA/CFSAN Food
Safety A to Z Reference Guide, September 2001:
Handwashing.
Germs and Children
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Remind children to practice healthy habits too, because
germs spread, especially at school.
The flu has caused
high rates of absenteeism among students and staff in our
country's 119,000 schools. Influenza is not the only
respiratory infection of concern in schools -- nearly 22
million schools days are lost each year to the common cold
alone. However, when children practice healthy habits, they
miss fewer days of school.
School
administrators, teachers and staff: See
Preventing the Spread of Influenza (the Flu) in Schools
for CDC interim guidance.
More Facts, Figures, and How-Tos
CDC and its
partner agencies and organizations offer a great deal of
information about handwashing and other things you can do to
stop the germs that cause flu, the common cold, and other
illnesses. See
Other Resources and
Posters on this Stop the Spread of Germs site for a
select listing of Web sites, materials, and contact
information.
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Source: Am J
Infect Control 2000;28:340-6. |
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Stop the Spread of
Germs in Schools
Fast Facts
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• |
Approximately 1/5 of the U.S. population attends
or works in schools. (U.S. Dept of Ed, 1999). |
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• |
Some viruses and bacteria can live from 20
minutes up to 2 hours or more on surfaces like
cafeteria tables, doorknobs, and desks. (Ansari,
1988; Scott and Bloomfield, 1989) |
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• |
Nearly 22 million school days are lost annually
due to the common cold alone. (CDC, 1996) |
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Addressing the spread of germs in schools is
essential to the health of our youth, our
schools, and our nation. |
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• |
Students need to get plenty of sleep and
physical activity, drink water, and eat good
food to help them stay healthy in the winter and
all year. |
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Related Links
Eva Stone, ARNP
School Health Coordinator
http://www.lincoln.kyschools.us/schoolhealth/index.htm
606-365-7287
eva.stone@lincoln.kyschools.us
"The significant problems
we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at
when we created them." - Albert Einstein