How can you get your kids into the handwashing habit? Here are a few tips for you.
Why is it important to wash your hands? Explain to your children that handwashing helps prevent them from getting sick and making other people sick. No one likes to be sick, or get someone else sick. Handwashing can help prevent these from happening as often.
Tell your child to wash their hands before:
Eating
Touching their mouth, eyes, or nose
Touching a cut or scrape
And after:
Going to the bathroom
Playing with pets or other animals
Touching pet food or treats
Being on playground equipment
Being close to a person who is sick
Touching a dirty diaper
Touching garbage
After blowing their nose, coughing, or sneezing into their hands
Here are 4 easy steps to clean hands:
Get wet and soapy. Get your hands wet in clean, running water (warm or cold). Put soap on your hands and make suds.
Rub. Rub, rub, rub your soapy hands together for at least 20 seconds or long enough to sing “Happy Birthday” in your head twice. Clean your palms, the back of your hands, and between your fingers. Don’t forget to clean under your nails. Nails can trap dirt and germs.
Rinse. Hold your hands under clean, running water. Rub them to rinse them fully.
Shake and dry. Shake your hands a few times, then dry them with a clean towel or hand dryer. Done!
If your child is small, hold them up to the sink. If your child can stand, use a safety step to boost them up to the faucet.
If your child is too heavy to lift and there’s no step nearby, wipe their hands with a damp and soapy paper towel. Use another clean, wet paper towel to rinse soap off the hands. Dry the hands with a third clean paper towel. Wash your own hands after helping your child.
Hand sanitizer doesn’t work well when hands are visibly dirty or greasy. Soap and water are best because they remove dirt, grease, and germs fully. But hand sanitizer is a good backup when you can’t get to soap and water. Use an alcohol-based sanitizer with at least 60% alcohol.
Watch while you tell your child to:
Squirt. Put a dime-sized blob of hand sanitizer into a palm.
Rub. Rub their hands–front and back and between fingers—until they’re dry. Done!
Lead by example. Make sure to practice what you preach. Wash your hands before eating or cooking a meal, after using the bathroom, and after working or playing with your hands.
Be patient. It takes time for a child to get into the habit of handwashing, and do it properly. Make sure to give help when needed.
Remind as often as needed. Children will wash their hands if dirt is obvious, like mud or finger paint. They will need to be reminded to wash away germs that can’t be seen.