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What Is the Real Difference Between Hand Sanitizing and Handwashing?

By Asquith Williams, Chief Operations Officer for Charlotte Products

The best defense against the spread of COVID-19 continues to be handwashing. Cleaning hands at key times with soap and water or hand sanitizer is one of the most important steps you can take to avoid getting sick and spreading germs to those around you. But many people still have questions about the difference between handwashing and using hand sanitizer. Below, we explain the science behind handwashing and the use of hand sanitizer when it comes to fighting COVID-19. 

The reason that handwashing is so effective at preventing the spread of COVID-19 is that the coronavirus has a vulnerable outer layer made of lipids. Soap dissolves this outer membrane, breaks it apart and renders the virus inactive. Then when you rinse your hands with water, all of the molecules you have just disrupted with the soap are washed away. 

Hand sanitizers that contain at least 60% alcohol act similarly, by destabilizing the lipid membrane of the virus. However, hand sanitizers do not include a rinse with water, meaning the microbes are not fully removed from the skin. That’s why handwashing will always be the most preferable way to protect against the virus, but alcohol-based hand sanitizer is an effective backup when soap and water are not accessible.

Hand Washing Tips

Hand Sanitizer Tips

The bottom line is that hand washing is our best weapon against contracting COVID-19. In this time of pandemic, it is important to promote frequent hand washing in our facilities, among our staff and in our personal homes. When soap and water is accessible, hand washing is just a little bit safer and more effective against the virus. However, when on the go or when soap and water are not accessible, hand sanitizer is an invaluable tool in preventing the spread of infection. 

 

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