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‎15 October 2008 – Global Handwashing Day emphasises simple way to protect health

The world’s first Global Handwashing Day is being celebrated today – and in Sudan families are being ‎reminded that the simple act of washing one’s hands with soap can save lives. ‎

As part of the International Year of Sanitation in 2008, Global Handwashing Day aims to increase the ‎practice of handwashing with soap – one of the most effective ways of preventing diarrhoeal disease ‎and pneumonia, which together claim the lives of more than 3.5 million children across the world ‎every year. ‎

‎“Handwashing with soap is the single most cost-effective health intervention at our disposal,” said ‎UNICEF Representative Ted Chaiban. “Moreover, it is something that every individual in every family ‎across Sudan can practice. The benefits are considerable – handwashing with soap helps prevent ‎diarrhoeal disease, limits the transmission of respiratory diseases such as pneumonia, and can reduce ‎the risks of other health problems such as worms, eye infections and skin infections.”‎

Despite its live-saving potential, handwashing with soap is not widely practiced – in the northern states ‎of Sudan a recent study showed that 53 per cent of the population did not wash its hands after using the ‎toilet, cleaning children, or before handling food. The 2006 Sudan Household Health Survey also ‎found that across Sudan, the incidence of diarrhoeal disease amongst children under the age of five ‎stands at an estimated 28 per cent, while 12 per cent of children in the same age group are affected by ‎pneumonia. ‎

To help spread the message of the benefits of handwashing with soap, 30 schools in each of the fifteen ‎states in the north of Sudan will organize handwashing activities through local school hygiene clubs. ‎School teachers will be requested to include regular messages about handwashing during morning ‎parades, while television and radio stations will be asked to highlight the issue of handwashing in their ‎daily programming. In Southern Sudan, 30,000 children in some 20 schools will also take part in ‎events to promote handwashing, under the theme “Children, Change Agents for Handwashing". ‎Planned activities include a mass handwashing with soap by children, games and dramas on the ‎importance of handwashing.‎

Effective handwashing is also an integral part of the Sudan Accelerated Child Survival Initiative – an ‎ongoing package of integrated health activities delivered at community level which is designed to ‎tackle some of the key causes of child mortality in Sudan. ‎

‎“The simple fact is that handwashing with soap improves health, and saves lives,” said Ted Chaiban. ‎‎“When given such a simple and inexpensive opportunity to reduce the risk of serious disease, we all ‎have an obligation to respond and ensure that every father, mother and child in Sudan practices ‎handwashing with soap at critical moments during the day – before eating and preparing food, after ‎using the toilet or latrine, and after washing children.”‎

 

 
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