Handwashing: a simple intervention that can save lives

Welcome Back!

You have Gifts for Good in your basket.

Welcome Back!

Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

While handwashing is one of the most effective ways of preventing the spread of infectious disease, 40 per cent of the world’s population do not have access to soap and water at home.

On Global Handwashing Day (15 October) ChildFund Australia CEO Margaret Sheehan says the COVID-19 pandemic has been an important reminder of how a simple intervention can save lives.

“While we await the development of a safe vaccine, washing our hands with soap and water is one of the most important tools we have at our disposal to keep ourselves safe from COVID-19.

“In developing communities, handwashing can not only help protect children and families them COVID-19, but a range of potentially life-threatening diseases, including cholera, hepatitis and diarrheal infections.”

ChildFund works in partnership with local communities to overcome this challenge by constructing handwashing stations in schools, health clinics and villages.

Constructed with sinks, taps, and using water from nearby tanks, handwashing stations in rural schools not only help to stop the spread of illness among students, but are supported by health education programs that teach children how to integrate good hygiene practices into their daily routine.

Ms Sheehan said: “Most of us can simply turn on a tap and reach for the soap nearby to clean our hands multiple times throughout the day. When out and about, many of us have hand sanitiser readily available. These are things that, understandably, we take for granted.

“That is why on Global Handwashing Day, we are encouraging Australians to think about families who don’t have access to these conveniences and lend them a helping hand.

“Through our Gifts for Good catalogue, you can donate a handwashing station and give children and families the chance to better protect themselves from COVID-19 and other infectious disease.

Ms Sheehan added: “This year’s theme for Global Handwashing Day is ‘Hand Hygiene for All’. We know that COVID-19 is not over for anyone until it is over for everyone.

“Giving children around the globe the ability to clean their hands with soap and water is possibly one of the most important gifts we can give this year.”

Global Handwashing Day is held annually on 15 October and is dedicated to increasing awareness and understanding about the importance of handwashing with soap as an effective and affordable way to prevent diseases and save lives. 

Low rates of vaccinations for existing infectious diseases will compound the impacts of a COVID-19 outbreak in developing countries on Australia’s doorstep, ChildFund Australia warned today.

ChildFund Australia Health Advisor Tracy Yuen said many countries in the Asia-Pacific region, including Papua New Guinea (PNG) and Timor-Leste, already have low rates of vaccination due to poor health infrastructure.

“The health systems in these nations are already struggling to treat and prevent diseases that have spread due to low vaccination rates. We saw an example of this during the measles outbreak in Samoa last year.

“We are also deeply concerned that while existing healthcare resources are redeployed to respond to the virus, so many of these countries will not be left with any capacity to continue offering many routine programs, like immunisation. In some countries right now, they have already been halted.

“It’s a double-edged sword. Existing low vaccination rates will compound the health impacts of the pandemic on people and health systems while, over the longer term, the consequences of COVID-19 mean that routine vaccination programs will be a low priority.”

Last week, the United Nations announced that polio vaccination campaigns have been suspended, and measles immunisation campaigns have stopped in at least 23 countries.

“The economic downturn will also have a major impact on health programming. Even when the risk of COVID-19 is behind us, the global recession will mean many countries just don’t have the funds for mass scale immunisation.

“In countries like PNG, health services are already stretched. When you add a new infectious disease – like COVID-19 – into the equation, the impact will be severe both in the short and longer-term.”