Handwashing and respiratory illness among young adults in military training1

Authored by ajpmonline.org and submitted by WhatsAMisanthrope

Objectives: In response to increasing concerns about respiratory illness in military recruits, a simple handwashing program was developed and evaluated at a large Navy training center.

Methods: Clinical records from 1996 through 1998 were reviewed to determine weekly rates of respiratory illness before and after program implementation (1,089,800 person-weeks reviewed). A supplemental survey was given to a sample of recruits to assess self-reported respiratory illness and compliance with the handwashing program.

Results: A 45% reduction in total outpatient visits for respiratory illness was observed after implementation of the handwashing program. No change was noted in hospitalization rates for respiratory illness, which remained low during the observation period. Survey data supported clinical observations, as frequent handwashers self-reported fewer respiratory illness episodes when compared to infrequent handwashers. Surveys also revealed challenges with handwashing compliance.

Conclusions: Implementation of a handwashing program in this population of healthy young adults was associated with a marked reduction in outpatient visits for respiratory illness. Despite its success, maintenance of the handwashing program has been challenging in the time-constrained setting of military training.

smufr on March 2nd, 2020 at 01:20 UTC »

I always get my 5 hand washes out of the way as soon as I wake up. No need to waste time throughout the day!

WhatsAMisanthrope on March 1st, 2020 at 23:16 UTC »

I freely admit I'm just trying to get this to the front page so that people who say that hand-washing is useless can be proven wrong, and hopefully more people can avoid sickness.

tplgigo on March 1st, 2020 at 22:46 UTC »

Scrubbing being the most important part of doing so. Lots of friction.