Soap - Why its so much more Effective at pulling dirt off You.

Soap doesn't kill germs on our hands, it removes them. 

When you wash your hands with soap, the soap molecules act as a mediator between the water and oil molecules, and bind with both of them at the same time. Then when you rinse everything off, the soap carries away the germs with the water. 

How Soap Works

Handwashing now and previously during covid-19 is still one of the most important things you can do. As our hands are our major transmission point to our faces and mouths. 

Soap is powerful, but it cannot do all the work on its own. The amount of time you are rubbing your hands together and lathering up plays a massive role in handwashing efficacy. If you scrub your hands for just 15 seconds you remove about 90% of pathogens, but with an additional 15 seconds, you are removing 99.9% of pathogens. 

soap

For the most effective hand washing, you must use soap and you must be thorough. Work up a lather because the friction helps lift dirt and oils from your skin. They say up to 30 seconds is the best outcome.

Soap Hand washing

Once you've washed, be sure to air-dry or towel-dry. There's no agreed-upon best practice for drying, but wet hands are more likely to spread germs than dry ones, the CDC says. 

Soap - Drying Hands

 


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