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Students learn importance of proper hand hygiene
Published Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Natchez — If you walk by the McLaurin Elementary nurse’s office this year, you might hear the melodic voices of students singing “Happy Birthday To You” echoing from the room.
But the students won’t be having a party. Instead, they will be learning how to stay healthy and germ free.
Mandy Howington, the school’s nurse, has been showing her students the importance of washing hands thoroughly.
Photo by Ben Hillyer
McLaurin Elementary students Karley Kyzar and Taylor Brown lather up as part of the High Five Handwashing Program at the school. The program teaches students about germs and techniques they can use to minimize the transmission of germs.
Photo by Ben Hillyer
As part of the hand washing program, McLaurin students used a black light to shine on glo-germ, a powder used to demonstrate how germs are transmitted. The lighted part of the hands had the most glo-germs.
As part of her instruction, she has been having the students sing the birthday song as they lather up. But she doesn’t have them sing the song once.
“In order to properly wash your hands, you need to sing it two times,” Howington said. “You need to lather for about 20 seconds.”
This was just one of the lessons Howington has taught as part of the “High Five Hand Washing Program” through a grant from the Mississippi Nurses Foundation. The program, sponsored by Natchez Community Hospital, provides students with information about germs and how to minimize the transmission of germs from person to person.
Howington and school officials hope the lessons will reduce the incidence of illness in the school.
Learning proper washing techniques is just one part of the program.
More importantly, student learn when and how often they need to wash.
“You need to wash before you eat, when leaving the bathroom, when you sneeze and when you get dirty,” McLaurin student Jairus Patton said during class. “And after you pet your dog.”
“That’s a big one,” Howington stressed to the students. “You need to wash any time you touch another animal.”
As part of the program, Howington also visits classes armed with her own brand of glo-germ — a powder substance that spreads like germs but won’t make anyone sick.
During the class she picks a secret student who puts the powder in his or her hands. In regular light the powder is invisible and odorless.
Afterward the students are asked to play a board game called “Contagious.” The student roll dice, handle playing pieces, look at cards and slap each other on the back.
After 15 minutes of playing, the overhead lights turn out and the black light turns on. The once invisible powder suddenly lights up.
Bright spots show up on fingers, faces, clothing and various places on the gameboard. Any spot the secret student may have touched lights up.
“Look I have some in between my fingers,” Tyreek Woods said.
Afterward, the students take to the sink and wash their hands.
After a thorough scrubbing, Howington turns on the black light once more to show what a good hand washing can do.
Most of the students hands were clean and spotless during a recent lesson. Others had a few bright spots of the powder left in the crevices of fingernails.
Quincy Henderson was one of those students. Henderson quickly returned to the sink to make sure his hands were glo-germ free.
“I stayed back there for three minutes,” Henderson said.





Comments
Posted by getitright (anonymous) on March 4, 2008 at 9:52 a.m. (Suggest removal)
This is a great idea to help kids learn the importance of handwashing. I think this would be great in every curriculum.
Posted by Hardcorps (anonymous) on March 4, 2008 at 10:37 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Proper hand hygiene is especially important after shaking hands with a politician.
Posted by drawpaintsing (anonymous) on March 4, 2008 at 11:25 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I think that is a good idea. I took a health class in high school, and I think it would be good to had one in all schools, elementary as well. Children should learn the importance of proper hygiene from an early age.
Posted by freedom42 (anonymous) on March 4, 2008 at 1:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I know this is important - but shouldn't the parents be teaching this at home? just asking.
Posted by drawpaintsing (anonymous) on March 4, 2008 at 2:19 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Yes, they should, but like all other things, you have parents who don't teach them. That's why I said that. Every little bit helps. Some parents just don't care, and it's sad to say that.
Posted by getitright (anonymous) on March 4, 2008 at 2:26 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Trust me, there are a lot of children who are practically raising themselves these days. I'm sure that hand hygiene isn't something they are accustomed to.
I have actually been to McLaurin a couple of times this year for various reasons. Once I saw their nurse and she had an office full of kids. She still had a smile on her face and a tender tone in her voice. She seemed like a great person to be working with those kids. I wish we had a nurse like that when I was growing up!
Posted by freedom42 (anonymous) on March 4, 2008 at 3:34 p.m. (Suggest removal)
After working at Community er for several years - I wish all nurses were like that. And you are certainly right drawpaintsing - some parents just don't care!
Posted by ijohnson (anonymous) on March 4, 2008 at 9:34 p.m. (Suggest removal)
My mother was a nurse at Jefferson Davis, she taught us how to wash our hands like the surgeons do. I've passed that technique onto my kids -- we use our elbows or paper towel to turn off the water and open the door. NEVER, EVER TOUCH THEM WITH OUR BARE HANDS!!
The ADULTS are the ones who don't wash their hands. Go to any public bathroom and watch them go in the stall then right back out the door . . . NASTY!!!!
Maybe the kids can teach their parents something!
Posted by frogprincenessntz (anonymous) on March 5, 2008 at 3 a.m. (Suggest removal)
It is a parent's job, but it makes a larger impression on the child with the addition of germ glo and the black light. I stopped biting my nails when I was shown a "clean" fingernail under a microscope.
Great program!
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