SafeHands introduces alcohol-free instant hand sanitiser
Following an incident in the US where a four year-old child became intoxicated from licking the sanitiser applied to her hands by a teacher, many schools have banned alcohol-based hand sanitisers.
Florida-based SafeHands is launching a range of alcohol-free instant hand sanitisers with the manufacturing and distribution support of JF Daley International a leading supplier to the food and healthcare industries. The company is entering the industrial sector, including food service and healthcare.
"The recent news coverage of alcohol- based sanitisers highlights a problem that affects the greater public served by the health and food service industries," said Dr Jay Reubens, president and founder of SafeHands. Employees in these critical industries are finding it difficult to follow both legally mandated and industry standard protocols because of the painful and drying effects of the frequent use of alcohol hand sanitisers, he explained.
SafeHands has conducted scientific studies in independent labs that validated that multiple daily use of alcohol- based instant hand sanitisers can crack hands which trap germs and ultimately increase the potential for cross contamination.
While developing SafeHands, Dr. Reubens studied the possible relationship between the rising incidence of nosocomial infection and food borne illness with the increase use in alcohol-based hand sanitisers.
He concluded that employees are forsaking frequent hand sanitising because the alcohol-based products they are required to use cause pain and discomfort. "I created SafeHands as a soothing alternative to current alcohol-based hand sanitisers to encourage greater compliance with hand sanitizing requirements,” he said.
SafeHands is alcohol-free, non-toxic, non-drying, non-flammable with an approved germ-killing agent scientifically tested and proven superior to alcohol-based. It is marketed for multiple daily use to address the problems of red, dry and cracked hands that result from frequent use of alcohol based instant hand sanitisers.