Kimberly-Clark Professional highlights UK school curriculum blind spot

Published: 9-Dec-2013

Children failing to learn proper hand hygiene habits at an early age due to lack of time, cost and poor facilities


British children are failing to learn proper hand hygiene habits at an early stage in their lives due to lack of time, cost and poor facilities in nursery, pre- and primary schools and little emphasis on teaching good hand washing in the National Curriculum. This is the conclusion of an expert panel organised recently by hand hygiene champion Kimberly-Clark Professional.

The roundtable event, which brought together early years education experts, was designed to raise awareness of a curriculum blind-spot on hand hygiene in nurseries, pre- and primary schools, and unveil new research commissioned by Kimberly-Clark Professional. The study was conducted by Cogent Research, an independent market research company, consisting of 300 interviews with Head, Deputy Heads and teaching staff at primary schools throughout the UK.  Ten interviews with head teachers, deputy head teachers and senior teachers took place for the qualitative sample. The study was conducted in July 2013.

The research identified that while teaching professionals recognise the importance of hand hygiene in preventing the spread of germs and illness among children, there are a number of serious obstacles to best practice in UK nurseries, pre- and primary schools.

The key issues preventing good hand hygiene outlined by teachers taking part in the research included time (45%), cost (27%), poor/lack of facilities (6%) and lack of staff (5%). When asked to describe what respondents saw as 'inadequate facilities' in schools, teachers identified a shortage of wash basins, queues at busy periods, limited supplies of soap, poorly maintained facilities that are unpleasant to use, and water at the wrong temperature.

The importance of teaching hand hygiene early so that it becomes a habit cannot be underestimated, the panel concluded, as teaching children in early years' education to wash their hands properly would greatly help to combat the spread of minor illnesses, such as colds and stomach bugs. Germs are highly transmissible in the school environment with children playing and learning closely together. Every day thousands of children are off school due to the minor illnesses that are spread by poor hand hygiene. Hands are the 'transmission superhighways' of germs, said panellist Professor Sally Bloomfield, a leading hygiene and infectious diseases expert. 

'A robust approach to hand hygiene is the single most effective way of managing transmission of avoidable illness. It is also an important way of tackling the problem of antibiotic resistance. We have to find ways to reduce the amount of antibiotics we use and we can do this by reducing the need for antibiotic prescribing through good health practices.'

 

The round table panel, held in London, also brought together leading figures in early years' education such as Pete Mountstephen, Chair of the National Primary Heads (NPH) and Maureen Crandles, Director of the Melville Street Nursery which won the National Day Nurseries Association (NDNA's) Nursery of the year in Scotland and the UK in 2013. 

 

Kimberly-Clark Professional's research shows that 63% of school teachers who had concerns about absenteeism would like to improve their school's hand hygiene practices and routines so that they can reduce the amount of time that children and staff are off sick, and therefore make a positive impact on the school's performance as a whole. Implementing this change will not be easy, however, with teachers and schools facing many challenges in educating children about the importance of hand hygiene - not least because budgets have been cut and facilities are not always particularly sanitary, panellists reported.

 

With Government concerned about the threat of antibiotic resistance and ongoing fears about the possibility of a flu pandemic, teaching children about hand hygiene and preventing the spread of germs is a vital priority, Professor Bloomfield said. 'We need to stop telling ourselves we are too clean for our own good,' she noted.

'Teaching children about hand hygiene and preventing the spread of germs is a vital priority,' said Dr Louise Vickerman, Education Manager, Kimberly-Clark Professional. 'Good hygiene practices, such as regular hand washing with soap and warm water, is proven to greatly reduce the spread of common illnesses such as coughs and stomach bugs in educational environments.'

 

There are currently no specific Government regulations covering washrooms or hand-related hygiene in nurseries, pre-schools and primary schools in England.

 

Kimberly-Clark Professional launched The Healthy Schools Project in 2012. The initiative is designed to improve standards of hand hygiene among school and pre-school children to help reduce the number of days they are absent from school due to illness.

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