The "Small Steps for Big Change" report, commissioned by The Global Hygiene Council (GHC) is published today, highlighting the alarming burden of preventable infectious diseases in children worldwide and calls for a simple five-step plan to be implemented by families, communities and healthcare professions to improve everyday hygiene practices and stop children dying from preventable infections.
This is the Five Steps infographic. Courtesy of the Global Hygiene Council
The "Small Steps for Big Change" report, commissioned by The Global Hygiene Council (GHC) is published today, highlighting the alarming burden of preventable infectious diseases in children worldwide and calls for a simple five-step plan to be implemented by families, communities and healthcare professions to improve everyday hygiene practices and stop children dying from preventable infections.
There has never been a greater focus on the health and wellbeing of children, yet every day, the health of the world's children is under attack from common infectious diseases which could be prevented through improved hygiene practices. According to John Oxford, Emeritus professor of virology at the University of London and chair of the GHC, "It is unacceptable that largely preventable infections such as diarrhea are still one of the biggest killers of children globally."
The report states that more than 3 million children under the age of 5 years die from infectious diseases each year, almost a million children die from pneumonia each year,1 and more than 700,000 children under the age of 5 years die as a result of diarrhea. The report also demonstrates the current complacency regarding hygiene practices with over half of families (52 percent) not increasing surface disinfection at home during the cold and flu season and that 31% of reported foodborne outbreaks occur in private homes .
"Poor personal hygiene and home hygiene practices are widely recognized as the main causes of infection transmission for colds, influenza and diarrhea," explains Oxford. "Handwashing with soap has been shown to reduce diarrheal deaths by 50 percent and by developing this five-step plan, we want to deliver a clear and consistent message about how small changes in hygiene practices could have a big impact on the health and wellbeing of children around the world."
The five-step plan has been developed by GHC experts, spanning pediatricians, infectious disease specialists, and public health experts from the UK, France, the U.S., Nigeria, and South Africa. The five steps focus on making small changes such as improved hand hygiene and preventing the spread of infection causing germs in the home and wider community. The potential big changes that might result include halving the incidence of diarrhea and reducing the incidence and burden of common infections such as, gastroenteritis, colds and influenza in babies and children.
Professor Oxford adds; "Families, communities and healthcare professionals need to acknowledge that improved hygiene is effectively a first line of defense and that adopting better hygiene practices could have a dramatic and positive impact on the lives of young children worldwide."
Source: Global Hygiene Council
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