Your hands are now covered in splotches of ink after changing your inkjet printer's cartridge. To wash your hands properly, all you need is soap and warm water. To eliminate all traces of the virus on your hands, a quick scrub and a rinse won't cut it. Below is a step-by-step process for effective handwashing. Getting your hands wet first primes your skin for the soap, so that it can get down into crevices and folds more effectively than when your hands are dry.
If you were to remove this ring to wash your hands and accidentally leave it behind in a public restroom, you wouldn't be nearly as upset as if it were a genuine diamond ring that you had just left behind. Be sure to lather the back of your hands and between your fingers.
Yet just 5% of people spent more than 15 seconds washing their hands after using the restroom, and 10% didn't wash their hands at all, in a study of 3,749 college students published in the Journal of Environmental Health in 2013. By properly washing your hands before you do either of these things, you will remove most of your concerns.
It's important to scrub all the surfaces of your hands—which most people don't do. Fortunatey, the type of soap doesn't matter, per the CDC: Scientific studies have proved there are no added health benefits for consumers (not including healthcare professionals) using antibacterial soaps compared with using plain soap.
Even if you're not sick, wash your hands after blowing your nose, sneezing or coughing. Thus it is best to turn your jeans upside down and then put it in machine for washing or for drying. A sanitizer with an alcohol content of at least 60 percent is effective at killing many types of germs, says the CDC.
If you're quite familiar with Gordon, you'll notice he slips right into the cadence of going through one of his
#washyourhands recipes, but instead, he's just trying to help you learn how to wash your hands well. In American culture, we shake hands to greet people, which place even more value on cleanliness.