by Kelley Lindberg
Every year, when I talk to teachers about protecting the food-allergic
students in their classrooms, I’m asked if anti-bacterial hand sanitizer gels
and liquids will work to eliminate food allergens from kids’ hands.
It doesn’t.
Teachers love hand sanitizer. They can post a big tub inside
the classroom door, and have the kids file past it after lunch. Marvelously
convenient. And wonderful at curbing illnesses, since everyone knows classrooms
are germ factories.
But hand sanitizers don’t kill the proteins that cause
allergic reactions, and it leaves the proteins sitting on the hand.
A 2004 study by Perry et al, “Distribution of PeanutAllergen in the Environment,” actually
quantified the success rate of various cleaning methods for removing the most
common peanut allergen protein, Arachis
Hypogaea Allergen 1 (Ara h 1). For hands, they tested liquid soap, bar
soap, commercial wipes, plain water, and antibacterial hand sanitizer. For hard
surfaces, like tabletops, they tested common household cleaning agents and
dishwashing liquid.
This is what they found:
For hands, the peanut allergen was undetectable after
washing with liquid soap, bar soap, or commercial wipes. But plain water left
the allergen on 3 of 12 hands. Antibacterial hand sanitizer was the worst
performer, leaving the allergen on 6 of 12 hands. (Commercial wipes work
because they rub the proteins off the hand. Hand sanitizer gels just move them
around on the hand, but don’t remove them.)
For hard surfaces, they found that common household cleaners
(they tested 409, Target cleaner with bleach, and Lysol wipes) removed the
allergen completely. But liquid dish soap left the allergen on 4 of 12 tables.
From this study, it appears that good ol’ soap or commercial
wipes are your best friend for keeping hands allergen-free. So talk to your
teacher about using antibacterial cleaning wipes instead of that sanitizer gel –
that way they’ll prevent food-allergic reactions as well as sniffly noses! And
for tables, counters, desks, doorknobs, phones, or anything else, use
commercial cleaners instead of a swipe with a soapy dishrag.
For this same study, the authors also tested 6 preschools
and schools (1 of which was entirely peanut-free) to see if peanut allergens
were a problem on common surfaces. Out of the 6 schools, they found the peanut
allergen on only 1 of 13 water fountains, 0 of 22 desks, and 0 of 36 cafeteria
tables.
That’s very encouraging! Of course, the chances of food
allergens appearing on school surfaces will vary greatly from school to school
depending on their cleaning products, cleaning frequency, etc. But it is good
news anyway to know that if the school’s cleaning staff is conscientious about
using cleaning materials properly and frequently, the chance of accidental
contamination can be greatly reduced.
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Thank you for your fantastic ideas. I always have baby wipes in my home, ready and waiting for my grandchildren, as they are handy to have around to wipe mucky little fingers. I often prefer to use disinfectant wipes to wipe out the dirt. This makes our home clean and hygiene.
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