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Wikipedia

Hygiene

Hygiene is a set of practices performed to preserve health. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), "Hygiene refers to conditions and practices that help to maintain health and prevent the spread of diseases."[2] Personal hygiene refers to maintaining the body's cleanliness. Hygiene activities can be grouped into the following: home and everyday hygiene, personal hygiene, medical hygiene, sleep hygiene, and food hygiene. Home and every day hygiene includes hand washing, respiratory hygiene, food hygiene at home, hygiene in the kitchen, hygiene in the bathroom, laundry hygiene, and medical hygiene at home.

Washing one's hands,[1] a form of hygiene, is the most effective way to prevent the spread of infectious diseases.

Many people equate hygiene with "cleanliness", but hygiene is a broad term. It includes such personal habit choices as how frequently to take a shower or bath, wash hands, trim fingernails, and wash clothes. It also includes attention to keeping surfaces in the home and workplace clean, including bathroom facilities. Adherence to regular hygiene practices is often regarded as a socially responsible and respectable behavior, while neglecting proper hygiene can be perceived as unclean or unsanitary, and may be considered socially unacceptable or disrespectful, while also posing a risk to public health.

Definition and overview edit

Hygiene is a practice[3] related to lifestyle, cleanliness, health, and medicine. In medicine and everyday life, hygiene practices are preventive measures that reduce the incidence and spread of germs leading to disease.[4]

Hygiene practices vary from one culture to another.[5]

In the manufacturing of food,[6] pharmaceuticals,[7] cosmetics,[8] and other products, good hygiene is a critical component of quality assurance.

The terms cleanliness and hygiene are often used interchangeably, which can cause confusion. In general, hygiene refers to practices that prevent spread of disease-causing organisms. Cleaning processes (e.g., handwashing[1]) remove infectious microbes as well as dirt and soil, and are thus often the means to achieve hygiene.

Other uses of the term are as follows: body hygiene, personal hygiene, sleep hygiene, mental hygiene, dental hygiene, and occupational hygiene, used in connection with public health.

Home and everyday hygiene edit

Home hygiene overview edit

Home hygiene pertains to the hygiene practices that prevent or minimize the spread of disease at home and other everyday settings such as social settings, public transport, the workplace, public places, and more. Hygiene in a variety of settings plays an important role in preventing the spread of infectious diseases.[9] It includes procedures like hand hygiene, respiratory hygiene, food and water hygiene, general home hygiene (hygiene of environmental sites and surfaces), care of domestic animals, and home health care (the care of those who are at greater risk of infection).[citation needed]

At present, these components of hygiene tend to be regarded as separate issues, although based on the same underlying microbiological principles. Preventing the spread of diseases means breaking the chain of infection transmission so that infection cannot spread. "Targeted hygiene" is based on identifying the routes of pathogen spread in the home and introducing hygiene practices at critical times to break the chain of infection.[10] It uses a risk-based approach based on Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP).[citation needed]

The main sources of infection in the home are people (who are carriers or are infected), foods (particularly raw foods), water, pets, and domestic animals.[11] Sites that accumulate stagnant water – such as sinks, toilets, waste pipes, cleaning tools, and face cloths – readily support microbial growth and can become secondary reservoirs of infection, though species are mostly those that threaten "at risk" groups. Pathogens (such as potentially infectious bacteria and viruses – colloquially called "germs") are constantly shed via mucous membranes, feces, vomit, skin scales, and other means. When circumstances combine, people are exposed, either directly or via food or water, and can develop an infection.[citation needed]

The main "highways" for the spread of pathogens in the home are the hands, hand and food contact surfaces, and cleaning cloths and utensils (e.g. fecal–oral route of transmission). Pathogens can also be spread via clothing and household linens, such as towels. Utilities such as toilets and wash basins were invented to deal safely with human waste but still have risks associated with them. Safe disposal of human waste is a fundamental need; poor sanitation is a primary cause of diarrhea disease in low-income communities. Respiratory viruses and fungal spores spread via the air.[citation needed]

Good home hygiene means engaging in hygiene practices at critical points to break the chain of infection.[10][11] Because the "infectious dose" for some pathogens can be very small (10–100 viable units or even less for some viruses), and infection can result from direct transfer of pathogens from surfaces via hands or food to the mouth, nasal mucous, or the eye, "hygienic cleaning" procedures should be adopted to eliminate pathogens from critical surfaces.[citation needed]

Hand washing edit

 
Hand hygiene sign in public restroom

Hand washing (or handwashing), also known as hand hygiene, is the act of cleaning one's hands with soap or handwash and water to remove viruses/bacteria/microorganisms, dirt, grease, or other harmful and unwanted substances stuck to the hands. Drying of the washed hands is part of the process as wet and moist hands are more easily recontaminated.[12][13] If soap and water are unavailable, hand sanitizer that is at least 60% (v/v) alcohol in water can be used as long as hands are not visibly excessively dirty or greasy.[14][15] Hand hygiene is central to preventing the spread of infectious diseases in home and everyday life settings.[16]

The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends washing hands for at least 20 seconds before and after certain activities.[17][18] These include the five critical times during the day where washing hands with soap is important to reduce fecal-oral transmission of disease: after using the toilet (for urination, defecation, menstrual hygiene), after cleaning a child's bottom (changing diapers), before feeding a child, before eating and before/after preparing food or handling raw meat, fish, or poultry.[19]
 
A tippy tap for handwashing after using a urine-diverting dry toilet in Pumpuentsa, Ecuador

Respiratory hygiene edit

Correct respiratory and hand hygiene when coughing and sneezing reduces the spread of pathogens particularly during the cold and flu season:[9]

  • Carry tissues and use them to catch coughs and sneezes, or sneeze into your elbow.
  • Dispose of tissues as soon as possible.

Hygiene in the kitchen, bathroom and toilet edit

Routine cleaning of hands, food, sites, and surfaces (such as toilet seats and flush handles, door and tap handles, work surfaces, and bath and basin surfaces) in the kitchen, bathroom, and toilet rooms reduces the spread of pathogens.[20] The infection risk from flush toilets is not high, provided they are properly maintained, although some splashing and aerosol formation can occur during flushing, particularly when someone has diarrhea. Pathogens can survive in the scum or scale left behind on baths, showers, and washbasins after washing and bathing.[citation needed]

Thorough cleaning is important to prevent the spread of fungal infections. Molds can live on wall and floor tiles and on shower curtains. Mold can be responsible for infections, cause allergic reactions, deteriorate/damage surfaces, and cause unpleasant odors. Primary sites of fungal growth are inanimate surfaces, including carpets and soft furnishings.[21] Airborne fungi are usually associated with damp conditions, poor ventilation, or closed air systems.[citation needed]

Hygienic cleaning can be done through:[citation needed]

  • Mechanical removal (i.e., cleaning) using a soap or detergent. To be effective as a hygiene measure, this process must be followed by thorough rinsing under running water to remove pathogens from the surface.
  • Using a process or product that inactivates the pathogens in situ. Pathogen kill is achieved using a "micro-biocidal" product, i.e., a disinfectant or antibacterial product; waterless hand sanitizer; or by application of heat.
  • In some cases combined pathogen removal with kill is used, e.g., laundering of clothing and household linens such as towels and bed linen.

Laundry hygiene edit

Laundry hygiene involves practices that prevent disease and its spread via soiled clothing and household linens such as towels.[22] Items most likely to be contaminated with pathogens are those that come into direct contact with the body, e.g., underwear, personal towels, facecloths, nappies. Cloths or other fabric items used during food preparation, or for cleaning the toilet or cleaning up material such as feces or vomit are a particular risk.[11]

Microbiological and epidemiological data indicates that clothing and household linens are a risk factor for infection transmission in home and everyday life settings as well as institutional settings. The lack of quantitative data linking contaminated clothing to infection in the domestic setting makes it difficult to assess the extent of this risk.[22][11][23] This also indicates that risks from clothing and household linens are somewhat less than those associated with hands, hand contact and food contact surfaces, and cleaning cloths, but even so these risks need to be managed through effective laundering practices. In the home, this should be carried out as part of a multibarrier approach to hygiene which includes hand, food, respiratory, and other hygiene practices.[22][11][23]

Infectious disease risks from contaminated clothing can increase significantly under certain conditions, e.g., in healthcare situations in hospitals, care homes, and the domestic setting where someone has diarrhoea, vomiting, or a skin or wound infection. The risk increases in circumstances where someone has reduced immunity to infection.

Hygiene measures, including laundry hygiene, are an important part of reducing spread of antibiotic-resistant strains of infectious organisms.[24][25][26] In the community, otherwise-healthy people can become persistent skin carriers of MRSA, or faecal carriers of enterobacteria strains which can carry multi-antibiotic resistance factors (e.g. NDM-1 or ESBL-producing strains). The risks are not apparent until, for example, they are admitted to hospital, when they can become "self infected" with their own resistant organisms following a surgical procedure. As persistent nasal, skin, or bowel carriage in the healthy population spreads "silently" across the world, the risks from resistant strains in both hospitals and the community increases.[25] In particular the data indicates that clothing and household linens are a risk factor for spread of S. aureus (including MRSA and PVL-producing MRSA strains), and that effectiveness of laundry processes may be an important factor in defining the rate of community spread of these strains.[22][27] Experience in the United States suggests that these strains are transmissible within families and in community settings such as prisons, schools, and sport teams. Skin-to-skin contact (including unabraded skin) and indirect contact with contaminated objects such as towels, sheets, and sports equipment seem to represent the mode of transmission.[22]

During laundering, temperature and detergent work to reduce microbial contamination levels on fabrics. Soil and microbes from fabrics are severed and suspended in the wash water. These are then "washed away" during the rinse and spin cycles. In addition to physical removal, micro-organisms can be killed by thermal inactivation which increases as the temperature is increased. Chemical inactivation of microbes by the surfactants and activated oxygen-based bleach used in detergents contributes to the hygiene effectiveness of laundering. Adding hypochlorite bleach in the washing process achieves inactivation of microbes. A number of other factors can contribute including drying and ironing.

Drying laundry on a line in direct sunlight is known to reduce pathogens.[28]

In 2013 the International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene reviewed 30 studies of the hygiene effectiveness of laundering at temperatures ranging from room temperature to 70 °C (158 °F), under varying conditions.[29] A key finding was the lack of standardization and control within studies, and the variability in test conditions between studies such as wash cycle time, number of rinses, and other factors. The consequent variability in the data (i.e., the reduction in contamination on fabrics) in turn makes it extremely difficult to propose guidelines for laundering with any confidence. As a result, there is significant variability in the recommendations for hygienic laundering given by different agencies.[30]

Medical hygiene at home edit

Medical hygiene pertains to hygiene practices that prevent or minimize disease and the spreading of disease in relation to administering medical care to those who are infected or who are more at risk of infection in the home. Members of "at-risk" groups are cared for at home by a carer who may be a household member and who requires a good knowledge of hygiene. People with reduced immunity to infection, who are looked after at home, make up an increasing proportion of the population (as of 2009, up to 20%).[9] The largest proportion are the elderly who have co-morbidities that reduce their immunity to infection. It also includes the very young, patients discharged from hospital, taking immuno-suppressive drugs, or using invasive systems, etc. For patients discharged from hospital, or being treated at home, special "medical hygiene" procedures may need to be performed for them, such as catheter or dressing replacement, which puts them at higher risk of infection.

Antiseptics may be applied to cuts, wounds, and abrasions of the skin to prevent the entry of harmful bacteria that can cause sepsis. Day-to-day hygiene practices, other than special medical hygiene procedures,[31] are no different for those at increased risk of infection than for other family members. The difference is that, if hygiene practices are not correctly carried out, the risk of infection is much greater.

Disinfectants and antibacterials in home hygiene edit

Chemical disinfectants[32] are products that kill pathogens. If the product is a disinfectant, the label on the product should say "disinfectant" or "kills" pathogens. Some commercial products, e.g. bleaches, even though they are technically disinfectants, say that they "kill pathogens" but are not actually labelled as "disinfectants". Not all disinfectants kill all types of pathogens. All disinfectants kill bacteria (called bactericidal). Some also kill fungi (fungicidal), bacterial spores (sporicidal), or viruses (virucidal).

An antibacterial product acts against bacteria in some unspecified way. Some products labelled "antibacterial" kill bacteria while others may contain a concentration of active ingredient that only prevents them from multiplying. It is, therefore, important to check whether the product label states that it "kills bacteria". An antibacterial is not necessarily anti-fungal or anti-viral unless this is stated on the label.

The term sanitizer has been used to define substances that both clean and disinfect. More recently this term has been applied to alcohol-based products that disinfect the hands (alcohol hand sanitizers). Alcohol hand sanitizers however are not considered to be effective on soiled hands.[33]

The term biocide is a broad term for a substance that kills, inactivates or otherwise controls living organisms. It includes antiseptics and disinfectants, which combat micro-organisms, and pesticides.

Personal hygiene edit

Regular activities edit

 
A clear plastic toiletry bag

Personal hygiene involves those practices performed by a person to care for their bodily health and well-being through cleanliness. Motivations for personal hygiene practice include reduction of personal illness, healing from illness, optimal health and sense of wellbeing, social acceptance, and prevention of spread of illness to others. What is considered proper personal hygiene can be culture-specific and may change over time.

Practices that are generally considered proper hygiene include showering or bathing regularly, washing hands regularly and especially before handling food, washing scalp hair, keeping hair short or removing hair, wearing clean clothing, brushing teeth, and trimming fingernails and toenails. Some practices are gender-specific, such as by a woman during her menstruation.

Toiletry bags hold body hygiene and toiletry supplies.

Anal hygiene is the practice that a person performs on their anal area after defecation. The anus and buttocks may be either washed with liquids or wiped with toilet paper, or by adding gel wipe to toilet tissue as an alternative to wet wipes or other solid materials in order to remove remnants of feces.

People tend to develop a routine for attending to their personal hygiene needs. Other personal hygienic practices include covering one's mouth when coughing, disposal of soiled tissues appropriately, making sure toilets are clean, and making sure food handling areas are clean, besides other practices. Some cultures do not kiss or shake hands in order to reduce transmission of bacteria by contact.

Personal grooming extends personal hygiene as it pertains to the maintenance of a good personal and public appearance, which need not necessarily be hygienic. It may involve, for example, using deodorants or perfume, shaving, or combing.

Hygiene of internal ear canals edit

Excessive cleaning of the ear canals can result in infection or irritation. The ear canals require less care than other parts of the body because they are sensitive and mostly self-cleaning. There is a slow and orderly migration of the skin lining the ear canal from the eardrum to the outer opening of the ear. Old earwax is constantly being transported from the deeper areas of the ear canal out to the opening where it usually dries, flakes, and falls out.[34] Attempts to clean the ear canals through the removal of earwax can push debris and foreign material into the ear that the natural movement of ear wax out of the ear would have removed.

Oral hygiene edit

It is recommended that all healthy adults brush twice a day,[35][36] softly,[37] with the correct technique, replacing their toothbrush every few months (~3).[38]

 
Teaching a child how to properly brush the teeth

There are a number of common oral hygiene misconceptions. The National Health Service (NHS) of England recommends not rinsing the mouth with water after brushing – only to spit out excess toothpaste. They claim that this helps fluoride from toothpaste bond to teeth for its preventative effects against tooth decay.[39] It is also not recommended to brush immediately after drinking acidic substances, including sparkling water.[40] It is also recommended to floss once a day,[41] with a different piece of floss at each flossing session. The effectiveness of amorphous calcium phosphate products, such as Tooth Mousse, is in debate.[42] Visits to a dentist for a checkup every year at least are recommended.[43]

Sleep hygiene edit

Sleep hygiene is the recommended behavioral and environmental practices that promote better quality sleep.[44] These recommendations were developed in the late 1970s as a method to help people with mild to moderate insomnia, but, as of 2014, the evidence for effectiveness of individual recommendations is "limited and inconclusive".[44] Clinicians assess the sleep hygiene of people who present with insomnia and other conditions, such as depression, and offer recommendations based on the assessment. Sleep hygiene recommendations include establishing a regular sleep schedule, using naps with care, not exercising physically or mentally too close to bedtime, and avoiding alcohol as well as nicotine, caffeine, and other stimulants in the hours before bedtime.[45] Further recommendations include limiting worry, limiting exposure to light in the hours before sleep, getting out of bed if sleep does not come, not using the bed for anything but sleep, and having a peaceful, comfortable, and dark sleep environment.

Personal care services hygiene edit

Personal care services hygiene pertains to the care and use of instruments used in the administration of personal care services to people:

Personal care hygiene practices include:

Challenges edit

Excessive body hygiene is a possible sign of obsessive–compulsive disorder. Neglecting bodily hygiene, or the cleanliness of one's environment, may be a sign of major depression and other psychological disorders.

Hygiene hypothesis and allergies edit

Although media coverage of the hygiene hypothesis has declined, popular folklore continues to sometimes assert that dirt is healthy and hygiene unnatural. This has caused health professionals to be concerned that hygiene behaviors which are the foundation of public health are being undermined. In response to the need for effective hygiene in home and everyday life settings, the International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene developed a "risk-based" or targeted approach to home hygiene that seeks to ensure that hygiene measures are focused on the places and times most critical for infection transmission.[10] While targeted hygiene was originally developed as an effective approach to hygiene practice, it also seeks, as far as possible, to sustain "normal" levels of exposure to the microbial flora of our environment to the extent that is important to build a balanced immune system.

Although there is substantial evidence that some microbial exposures in early childhood can in some way protect against allergies, there is no evidence[citation needed] that humans need exposure to harmful microbes (infection) or that it is necessary to develop a clinical infection.[46] Nor is there evidence[citation needed] that hygiene measures such as hand washing, food hygiene, etc., are linked to increased susceptibility to atopic disease. If this[ambiguous] is the case, there is no conflict between the goals of preventing infection and minimizing allergies. A consensus is now developing among experts[weasel words] that the answer lies in more fundamental changes in lifestyles that have led to decreased exposure to certain microbial or other species, such as helminths, that are important for development of immuno-regulatory mechanisms.[47] There is still much uncertainty as to which lifestyle factors are involved.

Medical hygiene edit

Medical hygiene pertains to hygiene practices related to the administration of medicine and medical care that prevents or minimizes the spread of disease.

Medical hygiene practices include:

Most of these practices were developed in the 19th century and were well-established by the mid-20th century. Some procedures (such as disposal of medical waste) were refined in response to late-20th century disease outbreaks, notably AIDS and Ebola.

Food hygiene edit

Culinary hygiene (or food hygiene) pertains to practices of food management and cooking that prevent food contamination, prevent food poisoning, and minimize the transmission of disease to other foods, humans, or animals. Culinary hygiene practices specify safe ways to handle, store, prepare, serve, and eat food.

Food safety (or food hygiene) is used as a scientific method/discipline describing handling, preparation, and storage of food in ways that prevent foodborne illness. The occurrence of two or more cases of a similar illness resulting from the ingestion of a common food is known as a food-borne disease outbreak.[48] This includes a number of routines that should be followed to avoid potential health hazards. In this way, food safety often overlaps with food defense to prevent harm to consumers. The tracks within this line of thought are safety between industry and the market and then between the market and the consumer. In considering industry-to-market practices, food safety[49] considerations include the origins of food including the practices relating to food labeling, food hygiene, food additives and pesticide residues, as well as policies on biotechnology and food and guidelines for the management of governmental import and export inspection and certification systems for foods. In considering market-to-consumer practices, the usual thought is that food ought to be safe in the market and the concern is safe delivery and preparation of the food for the consumer. Food safety, nutrition and food security are closely related. Unhealthy food creates a cycle of disease and malnutrition that affects infants and adults as well.[50]

Hygiene aspects in low- and middle-income countries edit

In developing countries (or low- and middle-income countries), universal access to water and sanitation, coupled with hygiene promotion, is essential in reducing infectious diseases. This approach has been integrated into the Sustainable Development Goal Number 6 whose second target states: "By 2030, achieve access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene for all and end open defecation, paying special attention to the needs of women and girls and those in vulnerable situations".[51] Due to their close linkages, water, sanitation, hygiene are together abbreviated and funded under the term WASH in development cooperation.

About two million people die every year due to diarrheal diseases; most of them are children less than five years of age.[52] The most affected are people in developing countries who live in extreme conditions of poverty, normally peri-urban dwellers or rural inhabitants. Providing access to sufficient quantities of safe water and facilities for a sanitary disposal of excreta, and introducing sound hygiene behaviors are important in order to reduce the burden of disease.

Research shows that, if widely practiced, hand washing with soap could reduce diarrhea by almost fifty percent[53] and respiratory infections by nearly twenty-five percent[54] Hand washing with soap also reduces the incidence of skin diseases,[55] and eye infections like trachoma and intestinal worms, especially ascariasis and trichuriasis.[56] Other hygiene practices, such as safe disposal of waste, surface hygiene, and care of domestic animals, are important in low income communities to break the chain of infection transmission.[57]

Cleaning of toilets and hand wash facilities is important to prevent odors and make them socially acceptable. Social acceptance is an important part of encouraging people to use toilets and wash their hands, in situations where open defecation is still seen as a possible alternative, e.g. in rural areas of some developing countries.

Household water treatment and safe storage edit

 
Solar water disinfection (SODIS) application in Indonesia using clear polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic beverage bottles

Household water treatment and safe storage ensure drinking water is safe for consumption. These interventions are part of the approach of self-supply of water for households.[58] Drinking water quality remains a significant problem in developing[59] and in developed countries;[60] even in the European region it is estimated that 120 million people do not have access to safe drinking water. Point-of-use water quality interventions can reduce diarrheal disease in communities where water quality is poor or in emergency situations where there is a breakdown in water supply.[59][60][61][62] Since water can become contaminated during storage at home (e.g. by contact with contaminated hands or using dirty storage vessels), safe storage of water in the home is important.

Methods for treatment of drinking water at the household level include:[20][62]

  • chemical disinfection using chlorine or iodine
  • boiling
  • filtration using ceramic filters
  • solar disinfection — Solar disinfection is an effective method, especially when no chemical disinfectants are available.[63]
  • UV irradiation — Community or household UV systems may be batch or flow-though. The lamps can be suspended above the water channel or submerged in the water flow.
  • combined flocculation/disinfection systems — available as sachets of powder that act by coagulating and flocculating sediments in water followed by release of chlorine
  • multibarrier methods — Some systems use two or more of the above treatments in combination or in succession to optimize efficacy.
  • portable water purification devices

History edit

 
Three young women bathing, 440–430 BCE. Ancient Greece.
 
Swedish advert for toiletries, 1905–1906

Asia edit

China edit

Bathing culture in Chinese literature can be traced back to the Shang dynasty (1600–1046 BCE), when Oracle bone inscriptions describe people washing their hair and body in a bath. The Book of Rites, a work regarding Zhou dynasty (1046–256 BCE) ritual, politics, and culture compiled during the Warring States period, recommends that people take a hot shower every five days, and wash their hair every three days. It was also considered good manners to take a bath provided by the host before a dinner. In the Han dynasty, bathing became a regular activity, and for government officials bathing was required every five days.[64]

Ancient bath facilities have been found in ancient Chinese cities, such as Dongzhouyang archaeological site in Henan Province. Bathrooms were called Bi (Chinese: ), and bathtubs were made of bronze or timber.[65] Bath beans – a powdery soap mixture of ground beans, cloves, eaglewood, flowers, and even powdered jade – were recorded in the Han Dynasty. Bath beans were considered luxury toiletries, while common people simply used powdered beans without spices mixed in. Luxurious bathhouses built around hot springs were recorded in Tang dynasty.[64] While royal bathhouses and bathrooms were common among ancient Chinese nobles and commoners, public bathhouses were a relatively late development. In the Song dynasty (960–1279 CE), public bathhouses became popular and people could find them readily.[65] Bathing became an essential part of social life and recreation. Bathhouses often provided massage, nail cutting service, rubdown service, ear cleaning, food, and beverages.[65] Marco Polo, who traveled to China during the Yuan dynasty, noted Chinese bathhouses were using coal to heat the bathhouse, which he had never seen before in Europe.[66] Coal was so plentiful that Chinese people of every social class had bathrooms in their houses, and people took showers every day in the winter for enjoyment.[67]

A typical Ming dynasty bathhouse had slabbed floors and brick domed ceilings. A huge boiler would be installed in the back of the house, connected with the bathing pool through a tunnel. Water could be pumped into the pool by turning wheels attended by the staff.[65]

Japan edit

The origin of Japanese bathing is misogi, ritual purification with water.[68]

In the Heian period (794–1185 CE), houses of prominent families, such as the families of court nobles or samurai, had baths. The bath had lost its religious significance and instead became leisure. Misogi became gyōzui (to bathe in a shallow wooden tub).[68]: 36  In the 17th century, the first European visitors to Japan recorded the habit of daily baths in mixed sex groups.[68]

Indian subcontinent edit

The earliest written account of elaborate codes of hygiene can be found in several Hindu texts, such as the Manusmriti and the Vishnu Purana.[69] Bathing is one of the five nitya karmas (daily duties) in Hinduism, and not performing it leads to sin, according to some scriptures.

Ayurveda is a system of medicine developed in ancient times that is still practiced in India, mostly combined with conventional Western medicine. Contemporary Ayurveda stresses a sattvic diet and good digestion and excretion. Hygiene measures include oil pulling, and tongue scraping. Detoxification also plays an important role.[70]

The Americas edit

Mesoamerica edit

 
Codex Magliabechiano from the Loubat collection, 1904

Spanish chronicles describe the bathing habits of the peoples of Mesoamerica during and after the conquest. Bernal Díaz del Castillo describes Moctezuma (the Mexica, or Aztec, emperor at the arrival of Cortés) in his Historia verdadera de la conquista de la Nueva España as being "...Very neat and cleanly, bathing every day each afternoon...".

Bathing was not restricted to the elite, but was practiced by all people; the chronicler Tomás López Medel wrote after a journey to Central America that "Bathing and the custom of washing oneself is so quotidian [common] amongst the Indians, both of cold and hot lands, as is eating, and this is done in fountains and rivers and other water to which they have access, without anything other than pure water..."[71]

The Mesoamerican bath, known as temazcal in Spanish, from the Nahuatl word temazcalli, a compound of temaz ("steam") and calli ("house"), consists of a room, often in the form of a small dome, with an exterior firebox known as texictle (teʃict͜ɬe) that heats a small portion of the room's wall made of volcanic rocks; after this wall has been heated, water is poured on it to produce steam, an action known as tlasas. As the steam accumulates in the upper part of the room a person in charge uses a bough to direct the steam to the bathers who are lying on the ground, with which he later gives them a massage, then the bathers scrub themselves with a small flat river stone and finally the person in charge introduces buckets with water along with soap and grass used to rinse. This bath had also ritual importance, and was tied to the goddess Toci; it is also therapeutic when medicinal herbs are used in the water for the tlasas. It is still used in Mexico.[71]

Europe edit

 
Roman public baths (Thermae) in Bath, England

Regular bathing was a hallmark of Roman civilization.[72] Elaborate baths were constructed in urban areas to serve the public, who typically demanded the infrastructure to maintain personal cleanliness. The complexes usually consisted of large, swimming pool-like baths, smaller cold and hot pools, saunas, and spa-like facilities where people could be depilated, oiled, and massaged. Water was constantly changed by an aqueduct-fed flow. Bathing outside of urban centers involved smaller, less elaborate bathing facilities, or simply the use of clean bodies of water. Roman cities also had large sewers, such as Rome's Cloaca Maxima, into which public and private latrines drained. Romans did not have demand-flush toilets but did have some toilets with a continuous flow of water under them. The Romans used scented oils (mostly from Egypt), among other alternatives.

Christianity places an emphasis on hygiene.[73] Despite the denunciation of the mixed bathing style of Roman pools by early Christian clergy, as well as of the pagan custom of women bathing naked in front of men, this did not stop the Church from urging its followers to go to public baths for bathing,[73] which contributed to hygiene and good health according to the Church Fathers Clement of Alexandria and Tertullian.[74][75] The Church built public bathing facilities that were separated by sex near monasteries and pilgrimage sites. The popes situated baths within church basilicas and monasteries starting in the early Middle Ages.[74] Pope Gregory the Great promoted bathing as a bodily need.[75] The use of water in many Christian countries is due in part to the Biblical toilet etiquette which encourages washing after all instances of defecation.[76] Bidet and bidet showers were used in regions where water was considered essential for anal cleansing.[76][77]

Contrary to popular belief,[78] and although some of the Early Christian leaders, such as Boniface I,[79][better source needed] condemned bathing as unspiritual,[80] bathing and sanitation were not lost in Europe with the collapse of the Roman Empire.[81][82] Public bathhouses were common in medieval Christendom larger towns and cities such as Constantinople, Paris, Regensburg, Rome and Naples.[83] Great bathhouses were built in Byzantine centers such as Constantinople and Antioch.[84]

Northern Europeans were not in the habit of bathing: in the ninth century, Notker the Stammerer, a Frankish monk of St. Gall, related a disapproving anecdote that attributed ill results of personal hygiene to an Italian fashion:

There was a certain deacon who followed the habits of the Italians in that he was perpetually trying to resist nature. He used to take baths, he had his head very closely shaved, he polished his skin, he cleaned his nail, he had his hair cut as short as if it were turned on a lathe, and he wore linen underclothes and a snow-white shirt.

 
Woman's Bath, 1496, by Albrecht Dürer
 
Byzantine Bath in Thessaloniki

Secular medieval texts refer to the washing of hands before and after meals, but Sone de Nansay, a hero of a 13th-century romance, discovers to his chagrin that the Norwegians do not wash up after eating.[85] In the 11th and 12th centuries, bathing was essential to the Western European upper class: the Cluniac monasteries to which they resorted or retired were always provided with bathhouses, and even the monks were required to take full immersion baths twice a year, at the two Christian festivals of renewal, though exhorted not to uncover themselves from under their bathing sheets.[86] In the 14th century Tuscany, the newlywed couple's bath together was such a firm convention one such couple, in a large coopered tub, is illustrated in fresco in the town hall of San Gimignano.[87] Catholic religious orders of the Augustinians' and Benedictines' rules contained ritual purification,[88] and, inspired by Benedict of Nursia, encouragement for the practice of therapeutic bathing; Benedictine monks played a role in the development and promotion of spas.[89]

Bathing fell out of fashion in Northern Europe long before the Renaissance, when the communal public baths of German cities were a wonder to Italian visitors. Bathing was replaced by the heavy use of sweat-bathing and perfume, as it was thought in Europe that water could carry disease into the body through the skin. Bathing encouraged an erotic atmosphere that was played upon by the writers of romances intended for the upper class;[85] in the tale of Melusine the bath was a crucial element of the plot. "Bathing and grooming were regarded with suspicion by moralists, however, because they unveiled the attractiveness of the body. Bathing was said to be a prelude to sin, and in the penitential of Burchard of Worms we find a full catalogue of the sins that ensued when men and women bathed together."[86] Medieval church authorities believed that public bathing created an environment open to immorality and disease; the 26 public baths of Paris in the late 13th century were strictly overseen by the civil authorities.[86] At a later date Roman Catholic Church officials even banned public bathing in an unsuccessful effort to halt syphilis epidemics from sweeping Europe.[90] Protestantism also played a prominent role in the development of the British spas.[89]

Until the late 19th century, only the elite in Western cities typically possessed indoor facilities for relieving bodily functions. The poorer majority used communal facilities built above cesspools in backyards and courtyards. This changed after Dr. John Snow discovered that cholera was transmitted by the fecal contamination of water. Though it took decades for his findings to gain wide acceptance, governments and sanitary reformers were eventually convinced of the health benefits of using sewers to keep human waste from contaminating the water. This encouraged the widespread adoption of both the flush toilet and the moral imperative that bathrooms should be indoors and as private as possible.[91][verification needed]

Modern sanitation was not widely adopted until the 19th and 20th centuries. According to medieval historian Lynn Thorndike, people in Medieval Europe probably bathed more than people did in the 19th century.[92][better source needed] Some time after Louis Pasteur's experiments proved the germ theory of disease and Joseph Lister and others put this into practice in sanitation, hygienic practices came to be regarded as synonymous with health, as they are in modern times.

The importance of hand washing for human health – particularly for people in vulnerable circumstances like mothers who had just given birth or wounded soldiers in hospitals – was first recognized in the mid 19th century by two pioneers of hand hygiene: the Hungarian physician Ignaz Semmelweis who worked in Vienna, Austria, and Florence Nightingale, the English "founder of modern nursing".[93] At that time most people still believed that infections were caused by foul odors called miasmas.

Middle East edit

 
Ali Gholi Agha hammam, Isfahan, Iran

Islam stresses the importance of cleanliness and personal hygiene.[94] Islamic hygienical jurisprudence, which dates back to the 7th century, has a number of elaborate rules. Taharah (ritual purity) involves performing wudu (ablution) for the five daily salah (prayers), as well as regularly performing ghusl (bathing), which led to bathhouses being built across the Islamic world.[95] Islamic toilet hygiene also requires washing with water after using the toilet, for purity and to minimize pathogens.[96]

In the Abbasid Caliphate (8th–13th centuries), its capital city of Baghdad (Iraq) had 65,000 baths, along with a sewer system.[97] Cities and towns of the medieval Islamic world had water supply systems powered by hydraulic technology that supplied drinking water along with much greater quantities of water for ritual washing, mainly in mosques and hammams (baths). Bathing establishments in various cities were rated by Arabic writers in travel guides. Medieval Islamic cities such as Baghdad, Córdoba (Islamic Spain), Fez (Morocco), and Fustat (Egypt) also had sophisticated waste disposal and sewage systems with interconnected networks of sewers. The city of Fustat also had multi-storey tenement buildings (with up to six floors) with flush toilets, which were connected to a water supply system, and flues on each floor carrying waste to underground channels.[98]

A basic form of contagion theory dates back to the Persian medicine in the medieval, where it was proposed by Persian physician Ibn Sina (also known as Avicenna) in The Canon of Medicine (1025), the most authoritative medical textbook of the Middle Ages. He mentioned that people can transmit disease to others by breath, noted contagion with tuberculosis, and discussed the transmission of disease through water and dirt.[99] The concept of invisible contagion was eventually widely accepted by Islamic scholars. In the Ayyubid Sultanate, they referred to them as najasat ("impure substances"). The fiqh scholar Ibn al-Haj al-Abdari (c. 1250–1336), while discussing Islamic diet and hygiene, gave advice and warnings about how contagion can contaminate water, food, and garments, and could spread through the water supply.[100]

In the 9th century, Ziryab invented a type of deodorant.[101] He also promoted morning and evening baths, and emphasized the maintenance of personal hygiene. Ziryab is thought to have invented a type of toothpaste, which he popularized throughout Islamic Iberia.[102] The exact ingredients of this toothpaste are not known,[103] but it was reported to have been both "functional and pleasant to taste."[102]

Sub-Saharan Africa edit

In West Africa, various ethnic groups such as the Yoruba have used black soap to treat skin diseases.[104]

In Southern Africa, the Zulu people conducted methods of sanitation by using water stored in pottery at Ulundi.[105] The Himba people of Namibia and Angola also utilized mixtures of smoke and otjitze treat skin diseases in regions where water is scarce.

Soap and soap makers edit

 
Marseille soap in blocks of 600 g (21 oz)

Hard toilet soap with a pleasant smell was invented in the Middle East during the Islamic Golden Age when soap-making became an established industry. Recipes for soap-making are described by Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi (c. 865–925), who also gave a recipe for producing glycerine from olive oil. In the Middle East, soap was produced from the interaction of fatty oils and fats with alkali. In Syria, soap was produced using olive oil together with alkali and lime. Soap was exported from Syria to other parts of the Muslim world and to Europe.[106] Two key Islamic innovations in soapmaking was the invention of bar soap, described by al-Razi, and the addition of scents using perfume technology perfected in the Islamic world.[107]

By the 15th century, the manufacture of soap in Christendom had become virtually industrialized, with sources in Antwerp, Castile, Marseille, Naples, and Venice.[108] In the 17th century the Spanish Catholic manufacturers purchased the monopoly on Castile soap from the cash-strapped Carolinian government.[109] Industrially-manufactured bar soaps became available in the late 18th century, as advertising campaigns in Europe and America promoted popular awareness of the relationship between cleanliness and health.[110]

A major contribution of the Christian missionaries in Africa,[111] China,[112] Guatemala,[113] India,[114] Indonesia,[115] Korea,[116] and other places was better health care through hygiene and introducing and distributing soap,[117] and "cleanliness and hygiene became an important marker of being identified as a Christian".[118]

Society and culture edit

Religious hygienic customs edit

Many religions require or encourage ritual purification via bathing or immersing the hands in water. In Islam, washing oneself via wudu or ghusl is necessary for performing prayer. Islamic tradition also lists a variety of rules concerning proper hygiene after using the bathroom. The Baháʼí Faith mandates the washing of the hands and face prior to the obligatory Baháʼí prayers. Orthodox Judaism requires a mikveh bath following menstruation and childbirth, while washing the hands is performed upon waking up and before eating bread. Water plays a role in Christian rituals as well,[119] and in certain denominations of Christianity such as the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church which prescribes several kinds of hand washing for example after leaving the latrine, lavatory, or bathhouse, or before prayer, or after eating a meal, or ritual handwashing.[120][119]

Etymology edit

First attested in English in 1676, the word hygiene comes from the French hygiène, the latinisation of the Greek ὑγιεινή (τέχνη) hygieinē technē, meaning "(art) of health", from ὑγιεινός hygieinos, "good for the health, healthy",[121] in turn from ὑγιής (hygiēs), "healthful, sound, salutary, wholesome".[122] In ancient Greek religion, Hygeia (Ὑγίεια) was the personification of health, cleanliness, and hygiene.[123]

See also edit

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  110. ^ Newell S (2006). International Encyclopaedia of Tribal Religion: Christianity and tribal religions. Ohio University Press. p. 40. ISBN 9780821417096.
  111. ^ Grypma S (2008). Healing Henan: Canadian Nurses at the North China Mission, 1888–1947. University of British Columbia Press. p. 27. ISBN 9780774858212. the Gospel of Christ was central to the 'missionary' aspect of missionary nursing, the gospel of soap and water was central to 'nursing' aspect of their works.
  112. ^ Thomas K (2011). Securing the City: Neoliberalism, Space, and Insecurity in Postwar Guatemala. Duke University Press. pp. 180–181. ISBN 9780822349587. Christian hygiene existed (and still exists) as one small but ever important part of this modernization project. Hygiene provides an incredibly mundane, deeply routinized, marker of Christian civility ...Identifying the rural poor as 'The Great Unwashed,' Haymaker published Christian pamphlets on health and hygiene,... of personal hygiene' (filled with soap, toothpaste, and floss), attempt to shape Christian Outreach and Ethnicity.
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    • Bauman CM (2008). Christian Identity and Dalit Religion in Hindu India, 1868–1947. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 160. ISBN 9780802862761. Along with the use of allopathic medicine, greater hygiene was one of the most frequently mobilized markers of the boundary between Christians and other communities of Chhattisgarh... The missionaries had made no secret of preaching 'soap; along with 'salvation'...
    • Baral KC (2005). Between Ethnography and Fiction: Verrier Elwin and the Tribal Question in India. North Eastern Hill University Press. p. 151. ISBN 9788125028123. where slavery was in vogue Christianity advocated its end and personal hygiene was encouraged
  114. ^ Taylor JG (2011). Cleanliness and Culture: Indonesian Histories. Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies. pp. 22–23. ISBN 9789004253612. Cleanliness and Godliness: These examples indicate that real cleanliness was becoming the preserve of Europeans, and, it has to be added, of Christianity. Soap became an attribute of God — or rather the Protestant
  115. ^ Choi H (2009). Gender and Mission Encounters in Korea: New Women, Old Ways: Seoul-California Series in Korean Studies. Vol. 1. University of California Press. p. 83. ISBN 9780520098695. In this way, Western forms of hygiene, health care and child rearing became an important part of creating the modern Christian in Korea.
  116. ^ Channa S (2009). The Forger's Tale: The Search for Odeziaku. Indiana University Press. p. 284. ISBN 9788177550504. A major contribution of the Christian missionaries was better health care of the people through hygiene. Soap, tooth-powder and brushes came to be used increasingly in urban areas.
  117. ^ Thomas J (2015). Evangelising the Nation: Religion and the Formation of Naga Political Identity. Routledge. p. 284. ISBN 9781317413981. cleanliness and hygiene became an important marker of being identified as a Christian
  118. ^ a b Z Wahrman M (2016). The Hand Book: Surviving in a Germ-Filled World. University Press of New England. pp. 46–48. ISBN 9781611689556. Water plays a role in other Christian rituals as well.... In the early days of Christianity, two to three centuries after Christ, the lavabo (Latin for "I wash myself"), a ritual handwashing vessel and bowl, was introduced as part of Church service.
  119. ^ Pedersen KS (1999). (PDF). Warszawskie Studia Teologiczne. 12 (2): 203–216. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2020-05-29.
  120. ^ Liddell HG, Scott R. "ὑγιεινός". A Greek-English Lexicon. Perseus.
  121. ^ Liddell HG, Scott R. "ὑγιής". A Greek-English Lexicon. Perseus.
  122. ^ Liddell HG, Scott R. "ὑγίεια". A Greek-English Lexicon. Perseus.

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hygiene, hygienist, redirects, here, specific, kinds, hygienist, industrial, hygienist, dental, hygienist, social, movement, social, hygiene, community, united, states, colorado, this, article, require, copy, editing, this, text, needs, further, citations, ass. Hygienist redirects here For specific kinds of hygienist see Industrial hygienist and Dental hygienist For the social movement see Social hygiene For the community in the United States see Hygiene Colorado This article may require copy editing for This text needs further citations You can assist by editing it August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Hygiene is a set of practices performed to preserve health According to the World Health Organization WHO Hygiene refers to conditions and practices that help to maintain health and prevent the spread of diseases 2 Personal hygiene refers to maintaining the body s cleanliness Hygiene activities can be grouped into the following home and everyday hygiene personal hygiene medical hygiene sleep hygiene and food hygiene Home and every day hygiene includes hand washing respiratory hygiene food hygiene at home hygiene in the kitchen hygiene in the bathroom laundry hygiene and medical hygiene at home Washing one s hands 1 a form of hygiene is the most effective way to prevent the spread of infectious diseases Many people equate hygiene with cleanliness but hygiene is a broad term It includes such personal habit choices as how frequently to take a shower or bath wash hands trim fingernails and wash clothes It also includes attention to keeping surfaces in the home and workplace clean including bathroom facilities Adherence to regular hygiene practices is often regarded as a socially responsible and respectable behavior while neglecting proper hygiene can be perceived as unclean or unsanitary and may be considered socially unacceptable or disrespectful while also posing a risk to public health Contents 1 Definition and overview 2 Home and everyday hygiene 2 1 Home hygiene overview 2 2 Hand washing 2 3 Respiratory hygiene 2 4 Hygiene in the kitchen bathroom and toilet 2 5 Laundry hygiene 2 6 Medical hygiene at home 2 7 Disinfectants and antibacterials in home hygiene 3 Personal hygiene 3 1 Regular activities 3 2 Hygiene of internal ear canals 3 3 Oral hygiene 3 4 Sleep hygiene 3 5 Personal care services hygiene 3 6 Challenges 3 6 1 Hygiene hypothesis and allergies 4 Medical hygiene 5 Food hygiene 6 Hygiene aspects in low and middle income countries 6 1 Household water treatment and safe storage 7 History 7 1 Asia 7 1 1 China 7 1 2 Japan 7 1 3 Indian subcontinent 7 2 The Americas 7 2 1 Mesoamerica 7 3 Europe 7 4 Middle East 7 5 Sub Saharan Africa 7 6 Soap and soap makers 8 Society and culture 8 1 Religious hygienic customs 9 Etymology 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksDefinition and overview editHygiene is a practice 3 related to lifestyle cleanliness health and medicine In medicine and everyday life hygiene practices are preventive measures that reduce the incidence and spread of germs leading to disease 4 Hygiene practices vary from one culture to another 5 In the manufacturing of food 6 pharmaceuticals 7 cosmetics 8 and other products good hygiene is a critical component of quality assurance The terms cleanliness and hygiene are often used interchangeably which can cause confusion In general hygiene refers to practices that prevent spread of disease causing organisms Cleaning processes e g handwashing 1 remove infectious microbes as well as dirt and soil and are thus often the means to achieve hygiene Other uses of the term are as follows body hygiene personal hygiene sleep hygiene mental hygiene dental hygiene and occupational hygiene used in connection with public health Home and everyday hygiene editHome hygiene overview edit Home hygiene pertains to the hygiene practices that prevent or minimize the spread of disease at home and other everyday settings such as social settings public transport the workplace public places and more Hygiene in a variety of settings plays an important role in preventing the spread of infectious diseases 9 It includes procedures like hand hygiene respiratory hygiene food and water hygiene general home hygiene hygiene of environmental sites and surfaces care of domestic animals and home health care the care of those who are at greater risk of infection citation needed At present these components of hygiene tend to be regarded as separate issues although based on the same underlying microbiological principles Preventing the spread of diseases means breaking the chain of infection transmission so that infection cannot spread Targeted hygiene is based on identifying the routes of pathogen spread in the home and introducing hygiene practices at critical times to break the chain of infection 10 It uses a risk based approach based on Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point HACCP citation needed The main sources of infection in the home are people who are carriers or are infected foods particularly raw foods water pets and domestic animals 11 Sites that accumulate stagnant water such as sinks toilets waste pipes cleaning tools and face cloths readily support microbial growth and can become secondary reservoirs of infection though species are mostly those that threaten at risk groups Pathogens such as potentially infectious bacteria and viruses colloquially called germs are constantly shed via mucous membranes feces vomit skin scales and other means When circumstances combine people are exposed either directly or via food or water and can develop an infection citation needed The main highways for the spread of pathogens in the home are the hands hand and food contact surfaces and cleaning cloths and utensils e g fecal oral route of transmission Pathogens can also be spread via clothing and household linens such as towels Utilities such as toilets and wash basins were invented to deal safely with human waste but still have risks associated with them Safe disposal of human waste is a fundamental need poor sanitation is a primary cause of diarrhea disease in low income communities Respiratory viruses and fungal spores spread via the air citation needed Good home hygiene means engaging in hygiene practices at critical points to break the chain of infection 10 11 Because the infectious dose for some pathogens can be very small 10 100 viable units or even less for some viruses and infection can result from direct transfer of pathogens from surfaces via hands or food to the mouth nasal mucous or the eye hygienic cleaning procedures should be adopted to eliminate pathogens from critical surfaces citation needed Hand washing edit nbsp Hand hygiene sign in public restroomThis section is an excerpt from Hand washing edit Hand washing or handwashing also known as hand hygiene is the act of cleaning one s hands with soap or handwash and water to remove viruses bacteria microorganisms dirt grease or other harmful and unwanted substances stuck to the hands Drying of the washed hands is part of the process as wet and moist hands are more easily recontaminated 12 13 If soap and water are unavailable hand sanitizer that is at least 60 v v alcohol in water can be used as long as hands are not visibly excessively dirty or greasy 14 15 Hand hygiene is central to preventing the spread of infectious diseases in home and everyday life settings 16 The World Health Organization WHO recommends washing hands for at least 20 seconds before and after certain activities 17 18 These include the five critical times during the day where washing hands with soap is important to reduce fecal oral transmission of disease after using the toilet for urination defecation menstrual hygiene after cleaning a child s bottom changing diapers before feeding a child before eating and before after preparing food or handling raw meat fish or poultry 19 nbsp A tippy tap for handwashing after using a urine diverting dry toilet in Pumpuentsa EcuadorRespiratory hygiene edit Correct respiratory and hand hygiene when coughing and sneezing reduces the spread of pathogens particularly during the cold and flu season 9 Carry tissues and use them to catch coughs and sneezes or sneeze into your elbow Dispose of tissues as soon as possible Hygiene in the kitchen bathroom and toilet edit Routine cleaning of hands food sites and surfaces such as toilet seats and flush handles door and tap handles work surfaces and bath and basin surfaces in the kitchen bathroom and toilet rooms reduces the spread of pathogens 20 The infection risk from flush toilets is not high provided they are properly maintained although some splashing and aerosol formation can occur during flushing particularly when someone has diarrhea Pathogens can survive in the scum or scale left behind on baths showers and washbasins after washing and bathing citation needed Thorough cleaning is important to prevent the spread of fungal infections Molds can live on wall and floor tiles and on shower curtains Mold can be responsible for infections cause allergic reactions deteriorate damage surfaces and cause unpleasant odors Primary sites of fungal growth are inanimate surfaces including carpets and soft furnishings 21 Airborne fungi are usually associated with damp conditions poor ventilation or closed air systems citation needed Hygienic cleaning can be done through citation needed Mechanical removal i e cleaning using a soap or detergent To be effective as a hygiene measure this process must be followed by thorough rinsing under running water to remove pathogens from the surface Using a process or product that inactivates the pathogens in situ Pathogen kill is achieved using a micro biocidal product i e a disinfectant or antibacterial product waterless hand sanitizer or by application of heat In some cases combined pathogen removal with kill is used e g laundering of clothing and household linens such as towels and bed linen Laundry hygiene edit Laundry hygiene involves practices that prevent disease and its spread via soiled clothing and household linens such as towels 22 Items most likely to be contaminated with pathogens are those that come into direct contact with the body e g underwear personal towels facecloths nappies Cloths or other fabric items used during food preparation or for cleaning the toilet or cleaning up material such as feces or vomit are a particular risk 11 Microbiological and epidemiological data indicates that clothing and household linens are a risk factor for infection transmission in home and everyday life settings as well as institutional settings The lack of quantitative data linking contaminated clothing to infection in the domestic setting makes it difficult to assess the extent of this risk 22 11 23 This also indicates that risks from clothing and household linens are somewhat less than those associated with hands hand contact and food contact surfaces and cleaning cloths but even so these risks need to be managed through effective laundering practices In the home this should be carried out as part of a multibarrier approach to hygiene which includes hand food respiratory and other hygiene practices 22 11 23 Infectious disease risks from contaminated clothing can increase significantly under certain conditions e g in healthcare situations in hospitals care homes and the domestic setting where someone has diarrhoea vomiting or a skin or wound infection The risk increases in circumstances where someone has reduced immunity to infection Hygiene measures including laundry hygiene are an important part of reducing spread of antibiotic resistant strains of infectious organisms 24 25 26 In the community otherwise healthy people can become persistent skin carriers of MRSA or faecal carriers of enterobacteria strains which can carry multi antibiotic resistance factors e g NDM 1 or ESBL producing strains The risks are not apparent until for example they are admitted to hospital when they can become self infected with their own resistant organisms following a surgical procedure As persistent nasal skin or bowel carriage in the healthy population spreads silently across the world the risks from resistant strains in both hospitals and the community increases 25 In particular the data indicates that clothing and household linens are a risk factor for spread of S aureus including MRSA and PVL producing MRSA strains and that effectiveness of laundry processes may be an important factor in defining the rate of community spread of these strains 22 27 Experience in the United States suggests that these strains are transmissible within families and in community settings such as prisons schools and sport teams Skin to skin contact including unabraded skin and indirect contact with contaminated objects such as towels sheets and sports equipment seem to represent the mode of transmission 22 During laundering temperature and detergent work to reduce microbial contamination levels on fabrics Soil and microbes from fabrics are severed and suspended in the wash water These are then washed away during the rinse and spin cycles In addition to physical removal micro organisms can be killed by thermal inactivation which increases as the temperature is increased Chemical inactivation of microbes by the surfactants and activated oxygen based bleach used in detergents contributes to the hygiene effectiveness of laundering Adding hypochlorite bleach in the washing process achieves inactivation of microbes A number of other factors can contribute including drying and ironing Drying laundry on a line in direct sunlight is known to reduce pathogens 28 In 2013 the International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene reviewed 30 studies of the hygiene effectiveness of laundering at temperatures ranging from room temperature to 70 C 158 F under varying conditions 29 A key finding was the lack of standardization and control within studies and the variability in test conditions between studies such as wash cycle time number of rinses and other factors The consequent variability in the data i e the reduction in contamination on fabrics in turn makes it extremely difficult to propose guidelines for laundering with any confidence As a result there is significant variability in the recommendations for hygienic laundering given by different agencies 30 Medical hygiene at home edit Medical hygiene pertains to hygiene practices that prevent or minimize disease and the spreading of disease in relation to administering medical care to those who are infected or who are more at risk of infection in the home Members of at risk groups are cared for at home by a carer who may be a household member and who requires a good knowledge of hygiene People with reduced immunity to infection who are looked after at home make up an increasing proportion of the population as of 2009 update up to 20 9 The largest proportion are the elderly who have co morbidities that reduce their immunity to infection It also includes the very young patients discharged from hospital taking immuno suppressive drugs or using invasive systems etc For patients discharged from hospital or being treated at home special medical hygiene procedures may need to be performed for them such as catheter or dressing replacement which puts them at higher risk of infection Antiseptics may be applied to cuts wounds and abrasions of the skin to prevent the entry of harmful bacteria that can cause sepsis Day to day hygiene practices other than special medical hygiene procedures 31 are no different for those at increased risk of infection than for other family members The difference is that if hygiene practices are not correctly carried out the risk of infection is much greater Disinfectants and antibacterials in home hygiene edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Hygiene news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Chemical disinfectants 32 are products that kill pathogens If the product is a disinfectant the label on the product should say disinfectant or kills pathogens Some commercial products e g bleaches even though they are technically disinfectants say that they kill pathogens but are not actually labelled as disinfectants Not all disinfectants kill all types of pathogens All disinfectants kill bacteria called bactericidal Some also kill fungi fungicidal bacterial spores sporicidal or viruses virucidal An antibacterial product acts against bacteria in some unspecified way Some products labelled antibacterial kill bacteria while others may contain a concentration of active ingredient that only prevents them from multiplying It is therefore important to check whether the product label states that it kills bacteria An antibacterial is not necessarily anti fungal or anti viral unless this is stated on the label The term sanitizer has been used to define substances that both clean and disinfect More recently this term has been applied to alcohol based products that disinfect the hands alcohol hand sanitizers Alcohol hand sanitizers however are not considered to be effective on soiled hands 33 The term biocide is a broad term for a substance that kills inactivates or otherwise controls living organisms It includes antiseptics and disinfectants which combat micro organisms and pesticides Personal hygiene editRegular activities edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A clear plastic toiletry bagPersonal hygiene involves those practices performed by a person to care for their bodily health and well being through cleanliness Motivations for personal hygiene practice include reduction of personal illness healing from illness optimal health and sense of wellbeing social acceptance and prevention of spread of illness to others What is considered proper personal hygiene can be culture specific and may change over time Practices that are generally considered proper hygiene include showering or bathing regularly washing hands regularly and especially before handling food washing scalp hair keeping hair short or removing hair wearing clean clothing brushing teeth and trimming fingernails and toenails Some practices are gender specific such as by a woman during her menstruation Toiletry bags hold body hygiene and toiletry supplies Anal hygiene is the practice that a person performs on their anal area after defecation The anus and buttocks may be either washed with liquids or wiped with toilet paper or by adding gel wipe to toilet tissue as an alternative to wet wipes or other solid materials in order to remove remnants of feces People tend to develop a routine for attending to their personal hygiene needs Other personal hygienic practices include covering one s mouth when coughing disposal of soiled tissues appropriately making sure toilets are clean and making sure food handling areas are clean besides other practices Some cultures do not kiss or shake hands in order to reduce transmission of bacteria by contact Personal grooming extends personal hygiene as it pertains to the maintenance of a good personal and public appearance which need not necessarily be hygienic It may involve for example using deodorants or perfume shaving or combing Hygiene of internal ear canals edit See also Earwax Excessive cleaning of the ear canals can result in infection or irritation The ear canals require less care than other parts of the body because they are sensitive and mostly self cleaning There is a slow and orderly migration of the skin lining the ear canal from the eardrum to the outer opening of the ear Old earwax is constantly being transported from the deeper areas of the ear canal out to the opening where it usually dries flakes and falls out 34 Attempts to clean the ear canals through the removal of earwax can push debris and foreign material into the ear that the natural movement of ear wax out of the ear would have removed Oral hygiene edit Main article Oral hygiene It is recommended that all healthy adults brush twice a day 35 36 softly 37 with the correct technique replacing their toothbrush every few months 3 38 nbsp Teaching a child how to properly brush the teethThere are a number of common oral hygiene misconceptions The National Health Service NHS of England recommends not rinsing the mouth with water after brushing only to spit out excess toothpaste They claim that this helps fluoride from toothpaste bond to teeth for its preventative effects against tooth decay 39 It is also not recommended to brush immediately after drinking acidic substances including sparkling water 40 It is also recommended to floss once a day 41 with a different piece of floss at each flossing session The effectiveness of amorphous calcium phosphate products such as Tooth Mousse is in debate 42 Visits to a dentist for a checkup every year at least are recommended 43 Sleep hygiene edit Main article Sleep hygiene Sleep hygiene is the recommended behavioral and environmental practices that promote better quality sleep 44 These recommendations were developed in the late 1970s as a method to help people with mild to moderate insomnia but as of 2014 update the evidence for effectiveness of individual recommendations is limited and inconclusive 44 Clinicians assess the sleep hygiene of people who present with insomnia and other conditions such as depression and offer recommendations based on the assessment Sleep hygiene recommendations include establishing a regular sleep schedule using naps with care not exercising physically or mentally too close to bedtime and avoiding alcohol as well as nicotine caffeine and other stimulants in the hours before bedtime 45 Further recommendations include limiting worry limiting exposure to light in the hours before sleep getting out of bed if sleep does not come not using the bed for anything but sleep and having a peaceful comfortable and dark sleep environment Personal care services hygiene edit Personal care services hygiene pertains to the care and use of instruments used in the administration of personal care services to people Personal care hygiene practices include sterilization of instruments used by service providers including hairdressers aestheticians and other service providers sterilization by autoclave of instruments used in body piercing and tattooing cleaning handsChallenges edit Excessive body hygiene is a possible sign of obsessive compulsive disorder Neglecting bodily hygiene or the cleanliness of one s environment may be a sign of major depression and other psychological disorders Hygiene hypothesis and allergies edit Main article Hygiene hypothesis Although media coverage of the hygiene hypothesis has declined popular folklore continues to sometimes assert that dirt is healthy and hygiene unnatural This has caused health professionals to be concerned that hygiene behaviors which are the foundation of public health are being undermined In response to the need for effective hygiene in home and everyday life settings the International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene developed a risk based or targeted approach to home hygiene that seeks to ensure that hygiene measures are focused on the places and times most critical for infection transmission 10 While targeted hygiene was originally developed as an effective approach to hygiene practice it also seeks as far as possible to sustain normal levels of exposure to the microbial flora of our environment to the extent that is important to build a balanced immune system Although there is substantial evidence that some microbial exposures in early childhood can in some way protect against allergies there is no evidence citation needed that humans need exposure to harmful microbes infection or that it is necessary to develop a clinical infection 46 Nor is there evidence citation needed that hygiene measures such as hand washing food hygiene etc are linked to increased susceptibility to atopic disease If this ambiguous is the case there is no conflict between the goals of preventing infection and minimizing allergies A consensus is now developing among experts weasel words that the answer lies in more fundamental changes in lifestyles that have led to decreased exposure to certain microbial or other species such as helminths that are important for development of immuno regulatory mechanisms 47 There is still much uncertainty as to which lifestyle factors are involved Medical hygiene editMedical hygiene pertains to hygiene practices related to the administration of medicine and medical care that prevents or minimizes the spread of disease Medical hygiene practices include isolation of infectious persons or materials to prevent spread of infection sterilization of instruments used in surgical procedures proper bandaging and dressing of injuries safe disposal of medical waste disinfection of reusables i e linen pads uniforms scrubbing up handwashing especially in an operating room but in more general health care settings as well where diseases can be transmitted ethanol based sanitizersMost of these practices were developed in the 19th century and were well established by the mid 20th century Some procedures such as disposal of medical waste were refined in response to late 20th century disease outbreaks notably AIDS and Ebola Food hygiene editMain article Food safetyCulinary hygiene or food hygiene pertains to practices of food management and cooking that prevent food contamination prevent food poisoning and minimize the transmission of disease to other foods humans or animals Culinary hygiene practices specify safe ways to handle store prepare serve and eat food This section is an excerpt from Food safety edit Food safety or food hygiene is used as a scientific method discipline describing handling preparation and storage of food in ways that prevent foodborne illness The occurrence of two or more cases of a similar illness resulting from the ingestion of a common food is known as a food borne disease outbreak 48 This includes a number of routines that should be followed to avoid potential health hazards In this way food safety often overlaps with food defense to prevent harm to consumers The tracks within this line of thought are safety between industry and the market and then between the market and the consumer In considering industry to market practices food safety 49 considerations include the origins of food including the practices relating to food labeling food hygiene food additives and pesticide residues as well as policies on biotechnology and food and guidelines for the management of governmental import and export inspection and certification systems for foods In considering market to consumer practices the usual thought is that food ought to be safe in the market and the concern is safe delivery and preparation of the food for the consumer Food safety nutrition and food security are closely related Unhealthy food creates a cycle of disease and malnutrition that affects infants and adults as well 50 Hygiene aspects in low and middle income countries editFurther information Water sanitation and hygiene In developing countries or low and middle income countries universal access to water and sanitation coupled with hygiene promotion is essential in reducing infectious diseases This approach has been integrated into the Sustainable Development Goal Number 6 whose second target states By 2030 achieve access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene for all and end open defecation paying special attention to the needs of women and girls and those in vulnerable situations 51 Due to their close linkages water sanitation hygiene are together abbreviated and funded under the term WASH in development cooperation About two million people die every year due to diarrheal diseases most of them are children less than five years of age 52 The most affected are people in developing countries who live in extreme conditions of poverty normally peri urban dwellers or rural inhabitants Providing access to sufficient quantities of safe water and facilities for a sanitary disposal of excreta and introducing sound hygiene behaviors are important in order to reduce the burden of disease Research shows that if widely practiced hand washing with soap could reduce diarrhea by almost fifty percent 53 and respiratory infections by nearly twenty five percent 54 Hand washing with soap also reduces the incidence of skin diseases 55 and eye infections like trachoma and intestinal worms especially ascariasis and trichuriasis 56 Other hygiene practices such as safe disposal of waste surface hygiene and care of domestic animals are important in low income communities to break the chain of infection transmission 57 Cleaning of toilets and hand wash facilities is important to prevent odors and make them socially acceptable Social acceptance is an important part of encouraging people to use toilets and wash their hands in situations where open defecation is still seen as a possible alternative e g in rural areas of some developing countries Household water treatment and safe storage edit nbsp Solar water disinfection SODIS application in Indonesia using clear polyethylene terephthalate PET plastic beverage bottlesHousehold water treatment and safe storage ensure drinking water is safe for consumption These interventions are part of the approach of self supply of water for households 58 Drinking water quality remains a significant problem in developing 59 and in developed countries 60 even in the European region it is estimated that 120 million people do not have access to safe drinking water Point of use water quality interventions can reduce diarrheal disease in communities where water quality is poor or in emergency situations where there is a breakdown in water supply 59 60 61 62 Since water can become contaminated during storage at home e g by contact with contaminated hands or using dirty storage vessels safe storage of water in the home is important Methods for treatment of drinking water at the household level include 20 62 chemical disinfection using chlorine or iodine boiling filtration using ceramic filters solar disinfection Solar disinfection is an effective method especially when no chemical disinfectants are available 63 UV irradiation Community or household UV systems may be batch or flow though The lamps can be suspended above the water channel or submerged in the water flow combined flocculation disinfection systems available as sachets of powder that act by coagulating and flocculating sediments in water followed by release of chlorine multibarrier methods Some systems use two or more of the above treatments in combination or in succession to optimize efficacy portable water purification devicesHistory edit nbsp Three young women bathing 440 430 BCE Ancient Greece nbsp Swedish advert for toiletries 1905 1906See also Public health History and History of water supply and sanitation Asia edit China edit Bathing culture in Chinese literature can be traced back to the Shang dynasty 1600 1046 BCE when Oracle bone inscriptions describe people washing their hair and body in a bath The Book of Rites a work regarding Zhou dynasty 1046 256 BCE ritual politics and culture compiled during the Warring States period recommends that people take a hot shower every five days and wash their hair every three days It was also considered good manners to take a bath provided by the host before a dinner In the Han dynasty bathing became a regular activity and for government officials bathing was required every five days 64 Ancient bath facilities have been found in ancient Chinese cities such as Dongzhouyang archaeological site in Henan Province Bathrooms were called Bi Chinese 湢 and bathtubs were made of bronze or timber 65 Bath beans a powdery soap mixture of ground beans cloves eaglewood flowers and even powdered jade were recorded in the Han Dynasty Bath beans were considered luxury toiletries while common people simply used powdered beans without spices mixed in Luxurious bathhouses built around hot springs were recorded in Tang dynasty 64 While royal bathhouses and bathrooms were common among ancient Chinese nobles and commoners public bathhouses were a relatively late development In the Song dynasty 960 1279 CE public bathhouses became popular and people could find them readily 65 Bathing became an essential part of social life and recreation Bathhouses often provided massage nail cutting service rubdown service ear cleaning food and beverages 65 Marco Polo who traveled to China during the Yuan dynasty noted Chinese bathhouses were using coal to heat the bathhouse which he had never seen before in Europe 66 Coal was so plentiful that Chinese people of every social class had bathrooms in their houses and people took showers every day in the winter for enjoyment 67 A typical Ming dynasty bathhouse had slabbed floors and brick domed ceilings A huge boiler would be installed in the back of the house connected with the bathing pool through a tunnel Water could be pumped into the pool by turning wheels attended by the staff 65 Japan edit The origin of Japanese bathing is misogi ritual purification with water 68 In the Heian period 794 1185 CE houses of prominent families such as the families of court nobles or samurai had baths The bath had lost its religious significance and instead became leisure Misogi became gyōzui to bathe in a shallow wooden tub 68 36 In the 17th century the first European visitors to Japan recorded the habit of daily baths in mixed sex groups 68 Indian subcontinent edit The earliest written account of elaborate codes of hygiene can be found in several Hindu texts such as the Manusmriti and the Vishnu Purana 69 Bathing is one of the five nitya karmas daily duties in Hinduism and not performing it leads to sin according to some scriptures Ayurveda is a system of medicine developed in ancient times that is still practiced in India mostly combined with conventional Western medicine Contemporary Ayurveda stresses a sattvic diet and good digestion and excretion Hygiene measures include oil pulling and tongue scraping Detoxification also plays an important role 70 The Americas edit Mesoamerica edit nbsp Codex Magliabechiano from the Loubat collection 1904Spanish chronicles describe the bathing habits of the peoples of Mesoamerica during and after the conquest Bernal Diaz del Castillo describes Moctezuma the Mexica or Aztec emperor at the arrival of Cortes in his Historia verdadera de la conquista de la Nueva Espana as being Very neat and cleanly bathing every day each afternoon Bathing was not restricted to the elite but was practiced by all people the chronicler Tomas Lopez Medel wrote after a journey to Central America that Bathing and the custom of washing oneself is so quotidian common amongst the Indians both of cold and hot lands as is eating and this is done in fountains and rivers and other water to which they have access without anything other than pure water 71 The Mesoamerican bath known as temazcal in Spanish from the Nahuatl word temazcalli a compound of temaz steam and calli house consists of a room often in the form of a small dome with an exterior firebox known as texictle teʃict ɬe that heats a small portion of the room s wall made of volcanic rocks after this wall has been heated water is poured on it to produce steam an action known as tlasas As the steam accumulates in the upper part of the room a person in charge uses a bough to direct the steam to the bathers who are lying on the ground with which he later gives them a massage then the bathers scrub themselves with a small flat river stone and finally the person in charge introduces buckets with water along with soap and grass used to rinse This bath had also ritual importance and was tied to the goddess Toci it is also therapeutic when medicinal herbs are used in the water for the tlasas It is still used in Mexico 71 Europe edit Further information Hygiene in Christianity History nbsp Roman public baths Thermae in Bath EnglandRegular bathing was a hallmark of Roman civilization 72 Elaborate baths were constructed in urban areas to serve the public who typically demanded the infrastructure to maintain personal cleanliness The complexes usually consisted of large swimming pool like baths smaller cold and hot pools saunas and spa like facilities where people could be depilated oiled and massaged Water was constantly changed by an aqueduct fed flow Bathing outside of urban centers involved smaller less elaborate bathing facilities or simply the use of clean bodies of water Roman cities also had large sewers such as Rome s Cloaca Maxima into which public and private latrines drained Romans did not have demand flush toilets but did have some toilets with a continuous flow of water under them The Romans used scented oils mostly from Egypt among other alternatives Christianity places an emphasis on hygiene 73 Despite the denunciation of the mixed bathing style of Roman pools by early Christian clergy as well as of the pagan custom of women bathing naked in front of men this did not stop the Church from urging its followers to go to public baths for bathing 73 which contributed to hygiene and good health according to the Church Fathers Clement of Alexandria and Tertullian 74 75 The Church built public bathing facilities that were separated by sex near monasteries and pilgrimage sites The popes situated baths within church basilicas and monasteries starting in the early Middle Ages 74 Pope Gregory the Great promoted bathing as a bodily need 75 The use of water in many Christian countries is due in part to the Biblical toilet etiquette which encourages washing after all instances of defecation 76 Bidet and bidet showers were used in regions where water was considered essential for anal cleansing 76 77 Contrary to popular belief 78 and although some of the Early Christian leaders such as Boniface I 79 better source needed condemned bathing as unspiritual 80 bathing and sanitation were not lost in Europe with the collapse of the Roman Empire 81 82 Public bathhouses were common in medieval Christendom larger towns and cities such as Constantinople Paris Regensburg Rome and Naples 83 Great bathhouses were built in Byzantine centers such as Constantinople and Antioch 84 Northern Europeans were not in the habit of bathing in the ninth century Notker the Stammerer a Frankish monk of St Gall related a disapproving anecdote that attributed ill results of personal hygiene to an Italian fashion There was a certain deacon who followed the habits of the Italians in that he was perpetually trying to resist nature He used to take baths he had his head very closely shaved he polished his skin he cleaned his nail he had his hair cut as short as if it were turned on a lathe and he wore linen underclothes and a snow white shirt nbsp Woman s Bath 1496 by Albrecht Durer nbsp Byzantine Bath in ThessalonikiSecular medieval texts refer to the washing of hands before and after meals but Sone de Nansay a hero of a 13th century romance discovers to his chagrin that the Norwegians do not wash up after eating 85 In the 11th and 12th centuries bathing was essential to the Western European upper class the Cluniac monasteries to which they resorted or retired were always provided with bathhouses and even the monks were required to take full immersion baths twice a year at the two Christian festivals of renewal though exhorted not to uncover themselves from under their bathing sheets 86 In the 14th century Tuscany the newlywed couple s bath together was such a firm convention one such couple in a large coopered tub is illustrated in fresco in the town hall of San Gimignano 87 Catholic religious orders of the Augustinians and Benedictines rules contained ritual purification 88 and inspired by Benedict of Nursia encouragement for the practice of therapeutic bathing Benedictine monks played a role in the development and promotion of spas 89 Bathing fell out of fashion in Northern Europe long before the Renaissance when the communal public baths of German cities were a wonder to Italian visitors Bathing was replaced by the heavy use of sweat bathing and perfume as it was thought in Europe that water could carry disease into the body through the skin Bathing encouraged an erotic atmosphere that was played upon by the writers of romances intended for the upper class 85 in the tale of Melusine the bath was a crucial element of the plot Bathing and grooming were regarded with suspicion by moralists however because they unveiled the attractiveness of the body Bathing was said to be a prelude to sin and in the penitential of Burchard of Worms we find a full catalogue of the sins that ensued when men and women bathed together 86 Medieval church authorities believed that public bathing created an environment open to immorality and disease the 26 public baths of Paris in the late 13th century were strictly overseen by the civil authorities 86 At a later date Roman Catholic Church officials even banned public bathing in an unsuccessful effort to halt syphilis epidemics from sweeping Europe 90 Protestantism also played a prominent role in the development of the British spas 89 Until the late 19th century only the elite in Western cities typically possessed indoor facilities for relieving bodily functions The poorer majority used communal facilities built above cesspools in backyards and courtyards This changed after Dr John Snow discovered that cholera was transmitted by the fecal contamination of water Though it took decades for his findings to gain wide acceptance governments and sanitary reformers were eventually convinced of the health benefits of using sewers to keep human waste from contaminating the water This encouraged the widespread adoption of both the flush toilet and the moral imperative that bathrooms should be indoors and as private as possible 91 verification needed Modern sanitation was not widely adopted until the 19th and 20th centuries According to medieval historian Lynn Thorndike people in Medieval Europe probably bathed more than people did in the 19th century 92 better source needed Some time after Louis Pasteur s experiments proved the germ theory of disease and Joseph Lister and others put this into practice in sanitation hygienic practices came to be regarded as synonymous with health as they are in modern times The importance of hand washing for human health particularly for people in vulnerable circumstances like mothers who had just given birth or wounded soldiers in hospitals was first recognized in the mid 19th century by two pioneers of hand hygiene the Hungarian physician Ignaz Semmelweis who worked in Vienna Austria and Florence Nightingale the English founder of modern nursing 93 At that time most people still believed that infections were caused by foul odors called miasmas Middle East edit nbsp Ali Gholi Agha hammam Isfahan IranIslam stresses the importance of cleanliness and personal hygiene 94 Islamic hygienical jurisprudence which dates back to the 7th century has a number of elaborate rules Taharah ritual purity involves performing wudu ablution for the five daily salah prayers as well as regularly performing ghusl bathing which led to bathhouses being built across the Islamic world 95 Islamic toilet hygiene also requires washing with water after using the toilet for purity and to minimize pathogens 96 In the Abbasid Caliphate 8th 13th centuries its capital city of Baghdad Iraq had 65 000 baths along with a sewer system 97 Cities and towns of the medieval Islamic world had water supply systems powered by hydraulic technology that supplied drinking water along with much greater quantities of water for ritual washing mainly in mosques and hammams baths Bathing establishments in various cities were rated by Arabic writers in travel guides Medieval Islamic cities such as Baghdad Cordoba Islamic Spain Fez Morocco and Fustat Egypt also had sophisticated waste disposal and sewage systems with interconnected networks of sewers The city of Fustat also had multi storey tenement buildings with up to six floors with flush toilets which were connected to a water supply system and flues on each floor carrying waste to underground channels 98 A basic form of contagion theory dates back to the Persian medicine in the medieval where it was proposed by Persian physician Ibn Sina also known as Avicenna in The Canon of Medicine 1025 the most authoritative medical textbook of the Middle Ages He mentioned that people can transmit disease to others by breath noted contagion with tuberculosis and discussed the transmission of disease through water and dirt 99 The concept of invisible contagion was eventually widely accepted by Islamic scholars In the Ayyubid Sultanate they referred to them as najasat impure substances The fiqh scholar Ibn al Haj al Abdari c 1250 1336 while discussing Islamic diet and hygiene gave advice and warnings about how contagion can contaminate water food and garments and could spread through the water supply 100 In the 9th century Ziryab invented a type of deodorant 101 He also promoted morning and evening baths and emphasized the maintenance of personal hygiene Ziryab is thought to have invented a type of toothpaste which he popularized throughout Islamic Iberia 102 The exact ingredients of this toothpaste are not known 103 but it was reported to have been both functional and pleasant to taste 102 Sub Saharan Africa edit In West Africa various ethnic groups such as the Yoruba have used black soap to treat skin diseases 104 In Southern Africa the Zulu people conducted methods of sanitation by using water stored in pottery at Ulundi 105 The Himba people of Namibia and Angola also utilized mixtures of smoke and otjitze treat skin diseases in regions where water is scarce Soap and soap makers edit Main article Soap History nbsp Marseille soap in blocks of 600 g 21 oz Hard toilet soap with a pleasant smell was invented in the Middle East during the Islamic Golden Age when soap making became an established industry Recipes for soap making are described by Muhammad ibn Zakariya al Razi c 865 925 who also gave a recipe for producing glycerine from olive oil In the Middle East soap was produced from the interaction of fatty oils and fats with alkali In Syria soap was produced using olive oil together with alkali and lime Soap was exported from Syria to other parts of the Muslim world and to Europe 106 Two key Islamic innovations in soapmaking was the invention of bar soap described by al Razi and the addition of scents using perfume technology perfected in the Islamic world 107 By the 15th century the manufacture of soap in Christendom had become virtually industrialized with sources in Antwerp Castile Marseille Naples and Venice 108 In the 17th century the Spanish Catholic manufacturers purchased the monopoly on Castile soap from the cash strapped Carolinian government 109 Industrially manufactured bar soaps became available in the late 18th century as advertising campaigns in Europe and America promoted popular awareness of the relationship between cleanliness and health 110 A major contribution of the Christian missionaries in Africa 111 China 112 Guatemala 113 India 114 Indonesia 115 Korea 116 and other places was better health care through hygiene and introducing and distributing soap 117 and cleanliness and hygiene became an important marker of being identified as a Christian 118 Society and culture editReligious hygienic customs edit Main article Ritual purification Further information Ablution in Christianity Hygiene in Christianity Islamic hygienical jurisprudence Ritual washing in Judaism and Islamic toilet etiquette Many religions require or encourage ritual purification via bathing or immersing the hands in water In Islam washing oneself via wudu or ghusl is necessary for performing prayer Islamic tradition also lists a variety of rules concerning proper hygiene after using the bathroom The Bahaʼi Faith mandates the washing of the hands and face prior to the obligatory Bahaʼi prayers Orthodox Judaism requires a mikveh bath following menstruation and childbirth while washing the hands is performed upon waking up and before eating bread Water plays a role in Christian rituals as well 119 and in certain denominations of Christianity such as the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church which prescribes several kinds of hand washing for example after leaving the latrine lavatory or bathhouse or before prayer or after eating a meal or ritual handwashing 120 119 Etymology editFirst attested in English in 1676 the word hygiene comes from the French hygiene the latinisation of the Greek ὑgieinh texnh hygieine techne meaning art of health from ὑgieinos hygieinos good for the health healthy 121 in turn from ὑgihs hygies healthful sound salutary wholesome 122 In ancient Greek religion Hygeia Ὑgieia was the personification of health cleanliness and hygiene 123 See also editCleaning station Location where aquatic life congregate to be cleaned Contamination control Activities aiming to reduce contamination Human decontamination Process of removing hazardous materials from the human body Hygiene program Hygiene services for people experiencing homelessness Hygiene theater Hygiene measures that give the illusion of safety Mysophobia Pathological fear of contamination and germs School hygiene cleanliness of the pupilsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Waterborne diseases Diseases caused by pathogenic microorganisms transmitted by watersReferences edit a b UNICEF and WHO 2021 State of the World s Hand Hygiene A global call to action to make hand hygiene a priority in policy and practice New York UNICEF Hygiene Overview World Health Organization WHO Retrieved 29 January 2020 Anderson PL Lachan JP eds 2008 Hygiene and its role in health New York Nova Science Publishers ISBN 978 1 60456 195 1 OCLC 181862629 Aiello Allison E Coulborn Rebecca M Perez Vanessa Larson Elaine L 2008 Effect of Hand Hygiene on Infectious Disease Risk in the Community Setting A Meta Analysis American Journal of Public Health 98 8 1372 1381 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2007 124610 hdl 2027 42 61196 PMC 2446461 PMID 18556606 WHO guidelines on hand hygiene in health care first global patient safety challenge clean care is safer care Geneva World Health Organization 2009 ISBN 978 92 4 159790 6 OCLC 854907565 Lelieveld H Holah J Napper D eds 2014 Hygiene in food processing principles and practice 2nd ed Oxford ISBN 978 0 85709 863 4 OCLC 870650548 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wood JP ed 2020 Containment in the pharmaceutical industry Boca Raton ISBN 978 0 429 07494 3 OCLC 1148475943 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Geis PA ed 2020 Cosmetic microbiology a practical approach Third ed Boca Raton ISBN 978 0 429 52443 1 OCLC 1202989365 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Bloomfield SF Exner M Fara GM Nath KJ Scott EA Van der Voorden C 2009 The global burden of hygiene related diseases in relation to the home and community International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene a b c Developing and promoting hygiene in home and everyday life to meet 21st Century needs PDF the International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene July 2021 Archived from the original PDF on 2022 05 17 a b c d e Bloomfield SF Exner M Signorelli C Nath KJ Scott EA 2012 The chain of infection transmission in the home and everyday life settings and the role of hygiene in reducing the risk of infection International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene Show Me the Science How to Wash Your Hands www cdc gov 2020 03 04 Retrieved 2020 03 06 Huang C Ma W Stack S August 2012 The hygienic efficacy of different hand drying methods a review of the evidence Mayo Clinic Proceedings 87 8 791 8 doi 10 1016 j mayocp 2012 02 019 PMC 3538484 PMID 22656243 Coronavirus Disease 2019 COVID 19 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 11 February 2020 Centers for Disease Control 2 April 2020 When and How to Wash Your Hands cdc gov Bloomfield Sally F Aiello Allison E Cookson Barry O Boyle Carol Larson Elaine L December 2007 The effectiveness of hand hygiene procedures in reducing the risks of infections in home and community settings including hand washing and alcohol based hand sanitizers American Journal of Infection Control 35 10 S27 S64 doi 10 1016 j ajic 2007 07 001 PMC 7115270 WHO How to handwash With soap and water YouTube Hand Hygiene How Why amp When PDF World Health Organization UNICEF Malawi www unicef org Retrieved 2020 01 05 a b Beumer R Bloomfield SF Exner M Fara GM Nath KJ Scott EA 2008 Hygiene procedures in the home and their effectiveness a review of the scientific evidence base International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene Cole E 2000 Allergen control through routine cleaning of pollutant reservoirs in the home environment Proceedings of Healthy Building 4 435 36 a b c d e Bloomfield SF Exner M Signorelli C Nath KJ Scott EA 2011 The infection risks associated with clothing and household linens in home and everyday life settings and the role of laundry International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene a b Larson EL Lin SX Gomez Pichardo C 2004 Predictors of infectious disease symptoms in inner city households Nurs Res 53 3 190 97 doi 10 1097 00006199 200405000 00006 PMID 15167507 S2CID 46126212 Recommendations for future collaboration between the U S and EU PDF Transatlantic Taskforce on Antimicrobial Resistance 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 07 08 a b Bloomfield SF 2013 Spread of Antibiotic Resistant Strains in the Home and Community International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene Maillard J Bloomfield SF Courvalin P Essack SY Gandra S Gerba CP Rubino JR Scott EA September 2020 Reducing antibiotic prescribing and addressing the global problem of antibiotic resistance by targeted hygiene in the home and everyday life settings A position paper American Journal of Infection Control 48 9 1090 1099 doi 10 1016 j ajic 2020 04 011 PMC 7165117 PMID 32311380 Bloomfield SF Cookson BD Falkiner FR Griffith C Cleary V 2006 Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus MRSA Clostridium difficile and ESBL producing Escherichia coli in the home and community assessing the problem controlling the spread International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene Hanging your clothes under sun OR using laundry dryer SiOWfa15 Science in Our World Certainty and Controversy 2015 10 21 Retrieved 2020 10 04 Bloomfield SF Exner M Signorelli C Scott EA 2013 Effectiveness of laundering processes used in domestic home settings International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene Clothing household linens laundry and hygiene Factsheet International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene 2013 Laundry treatments at high and low temperatures UK health and Safety Executive 2013 Home Hygiene Prevention of infection at home and in everyday life a learning and training resource Home Hygiene amp Health 2018 Archived from the original on 2022 07 02 Cleaning and disinfection Chemical Disinfectants Explained Home Hygiene amp Health 2014 Fraise AP Maillard J Sattar S eds 2013 Russell Hugo amp Ayliffe s principles and practice of disinfection preservation and sterilization 5th ed Chichester Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 118 42587 9 OCLC 825550689 Pickering AJ Davis J Boehm AB 2011 09 01 Efficacy of alcohol based hand sanitizer on hands soiled with dirt and cooking oil Journal of Water and Health 9 3 429 433 doi 10 2166 wh 2011 138 ISSN 1477 8920 PMID 21976190 S2CID 11800640 Stoppler MC How to Remove Ear Wax MedicineNet Brushing amp Flossing Technique amp Choosing Dental Products www colgate com Archived from the original on 2017 11 20 Retrieved 2018 04 15 Oral Hygiene National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research www nidcr nih gov Retrieved 2023 09 18 Are you brushing your teeth too hard Australian Broadcasting Corporation 3 June 2019 Brushing Your Teeth mouthhealthy American Dental Association How to keep your teeth clean NHS 26 April 2018 Kleist MK 2013 04 01 Wait Before You Brush Why Brushing your Teeth After Eating Could be Bad for You Naperville Magazine Archived from the original on 2020 02 20 Retrieved 2020 10 04 The Medical Benefit of Daily Flossing Called Into Question American Dental Association Archived from the original on 2018 04 16 Raphael S Blinkhorn A 25 September 2015 Is there a place for Tooth Mousse in the prevention and treatment of early dental caries A systematic review BMC Oral Health 15 1 113 doi 10 1186 s12903 015 0095 6 PMC 4583988 PMID 26408042 Hammond C 2014 09 26 How often do you need to see a dentist BBC Future a b Irish LA Kline CE Gunn HE Buysse DJ Hall MH October 2014 The role of sleep hygiene in promoting public health A review of empirical evidence Sleep Medicine Reviews 22 23 36 doi 10 1016 j smrv 2014 10 001 PMC 4400203 PMID 25454674 Healthy Sleep medlineplus gov Retrieved 2023 09 20 Stanwell Smith R Bloomfield SF Rook GA 2012 The Hygiene Hypothesis and its Implications for Home Hygiene Lifestyle and Public Health International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene The Hygiene Hypothesis and its implications for home hygiene lifestyle and public health Summary International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene 2012 Bloomfield SF Stanwell Smith R Crevel R Pickup J April 2006 Too clean or not too clean the Hygiene Hypothesis and home hygiene PDF Clinical and Experimental Allergy 36 4 402 25 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2222 2006 02463 x PMC 1448690 PMID 16630145 Rook G 11 March 2010 99th Dahlem Conference on Infection Inflammation and Chronic Inflammatory Disorders Darwinian medicine and the hygiene or old friends hypothesis Clinical amp Experimental Immunology 160 1 70 79 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2249 2010 04133 x PMC 2841838 PMID 20415854 Texas Food Establishment Rules Texas DSHS website Texas Department of State Health Services 2015 p 6 Food Safety Definition amp Why is Food Safety Important fooddocs com Retrieved 2022 11 16 Food safety who int Retrieved 2022 11 01 Goal 6 Clean water and sanitation UNDP Archived from the original on 2021 04 14 Retrieved 18 April 2017 Roser Max 2023 Sustainable Development Goal 6 Ensure access to water and sanitation for all Our World in Data The global burden of disease 2004 update World Health Organization Archived from the original on March 24 2009 Curtis V Cairncross S 2003 Effect of washing hands with soap on diarrhea risk in the community a systematic review Lancet Infectious Diseases 3 5 275 81 doi 10 1016 S1473 3099 03 00606 6 PMID 12726975 Aiello AE Coulborn RM Perez V Larson EL August 2008 Effect of Hand Hygiene on Infectious Disease Risk in the Community Setting A Meta Analysis American Journal of Public Health 98 8 1372 81 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2007 124610 PMC 2446461 PMID 18556606 Fewtrell L Kauffman RB Kay D Enanoria W Haller L Colford JM 2005 Water sanitation and hygiene interventions to reduce diarrhea in less developed countries a systematic review and meta analysis PDF Lancet Infectious Diseases 5 1 42 52 doi 10 1016 S1473 3099 04 01253 8 PMID 15620560 Ensink J 2006 Health impact of handwashing with soap WELL Archived from the original on 2010 06 19 Jefferson T Foxlee R Del Mar C et al 2007 Physical interventions to interrupt or reduce the spread of respiratory viruses systematic review British Medical Journal 336 7635 77 80 doi 10 1136 BMJ 39393 510347 BE PMC 2190272 PMID 18042961 Luby S Agboatalla M Feikin DR Painter J Billhimmer W Atref A Hoekstra RM 2005 Effect of hand washing on child health a randomized control trial Lancet 366 9481 225 33 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 05 66912 7 PMID 16023513 S2CID 13024434 Luby S Agboatwalla M Schnell BM Hoekstra RM Rahbar MH Keswick BH 2002 The effect of antibacterial soap on impetigo incidence Karachi Pakistan American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 67 4 430 35 doi 10 4269 ajtmh 2002 67 430 PMID 12452499 S2CID 9987503 Bloomfield SF Nath KJ 2009 Use of ash and mud for hand washing in low income communities International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene Guidelines for the prevention of infection and cross infection in the domestic environment focus on home hygiene issues in developing countries International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene 2002 Priadi CR Putri GL Foster T Willetts J Odagiri M February 2022 Self supply for safely managed water To promote or to deter PDF a b Combating waterborne disease at the household level PDF World Health Organization 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 2021 03 08 a b Nath KJ Bloomfield S Jones M 2006 Household water storage handling and point of use treatment International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene Water quality interventions to prevent diarrhoea Cost and cost effectiveness World Health Organization 2008 Archived from the original on September 30 2016 a b Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage Following Emergencies and Disasters PDF World Health Organisation 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 2022 03 01 Managing water in the home World Health Organization 2002 Archived from the original on May 18 2016 a b Sun J 1 July 2021 Bathing in Ancient Times theworldofchinese a b c d Awen 30 April 2019 Ancient Chinese Bath Culture View of China Golas PJ Needham J 1999 Science and Civilisation in China Cambridge University Press pp 186 91 ISBN 0 521 58000 5 Marco Polo s Descriptions of China Facts and Details Wolff D Marco Polo s World www dianewolff com a b c Clark S 1994 Japan A View from the Bath University of Hawaii Press ISBN 9780824816575 Aryan Code of Toilets 2nd Century AD Sulabh International Museum of Toilets Ajanal M Nayak S Prasad BS Kadam A 2013 10 23 Adverse drug reaction and concepts of drug safety in Ayurveda An overview Journal of Young Pharmacists 5 4 116 120 doi 10 1016 j jyp 2013 10 001 ISSN 0975 1483 PMC 3930110 PMID 24563588 a b Noriega Hernandez JC 2004 El bano temascal novohispano de Moctezuma a Revillagigedo Reflexiones sobre practicas de higiene y expresiones de sociabilidad PDF Thesis in Mexican Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 2013 04 06 Retrieved 2012 12 18 Roman bath houses Time Team Channel Four Television Corporation Archived from the original on 4 February 2007 a b Rutherdale M 2006 Ordering the Bath Children Health and Hygiene in Northern Canadian Communities 1900 1970 In Warsh CK Strong Boag V eds Children s Health Issues in Historical Perspective Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press p 315 ISBN 978 0 88920 912 1 Thus bathing also was considered a part of good health practice For example Tertullian attended the baths and believed them hygienic Clement of Alexandria while condemning excesses had given guidelines for Christian who wished to attend the baths a b Thurlkill M 2016 Sacred Scents in Early Christianity and Islam Studies in Body and Religion Rowman amp Littlefield pp 6 11 ISBN 978 0 7391 7453 1 Clement of Alexandria d c 215 CE allowed that bathing contributed to good health and hygiene Christian skeptics could not easily dissuade the baths practical popularity however popes continued to build baths situated within church basilicas and monasteries throughout the early medieval period a b Squatriti P 2002 Water and Society in Early Medieval Italy AD 400 1000 Parti 400 1000 Cambridge University Press p 54 ISBN 978 0 521 52206 9 but baths were normally considered therapeutic until the days of Gregory the Great who understood virtuous bathing to be bathing on account of the needs of body a b E Clark M 2006 Contemporary Biology Concepts and Implications University of Michigan Press p 613 ISBN 9780721625973 Douching is commonly practiced in Catholic countries The bidet is still commonly found in France and other Catholic countries Forgione A 2013 Made in Naples Come Napoli ha civilizzato l Europa e come continua a farlo Made in Naples How Naples civilised Europe And still does it in Italian Addictions Magenes Editoriale ISBN 978 88 6649 039 5 Snell M Middle Ages Weddings and Hygiene ThoughtCo Archived from the original on 2017 01 30 Retrieved 2008 03 05 Penn I 2007 Dogma Evolution amp Papal Fallacies AuthorHouse p 223 Ablutions or Bathing Historical Perspectives English Word Information Retrieved 22 February 2017 Nelson LH The Great Famine and the Black Death 1315 1317 1346 1351 Lectures in Medieval History Middle Ages Hygiene middle ages org uk Black W 2019 The Middle Ages Facts and Fictions ABC CLIO p 61 ISBN 9781440862328 Public baths were common in the larger towns and cities of Europe by the twelfth century Kleinschmidt H 2005 Perception and Action in Medieval Europe Boydell amp Brewer p 61 ISBN 9781843831464 Kazhdan A ed 1991 Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 page needed Kourkoutidou Nikolaidou E Tourta A 1997 Wandering in Byzantine Thessaloniki Kapon Editions p 87 ISBN 960 7254 47 3 a b Regnier Bohler D 1988 Imagining the self In Duby G ed A History of Private Life Vol II Revelations of the Medieval World pp 363f a b c Braunstein P 1988 Solitude eleventh to the thirteenth century In Duby G ed A History of Private Life Vol II Revelations of the Medieval World p 525 Fresco of c 1320 illustrated in de la Ronciere C 1988 Tuscan notables on the eve of the Renaissance In Duby G ed A History of Private Life Vol II Revelations of the Medieval World p 232 Hembry P 1990 The English Spa 1560 1815 A Social History Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press ISBN 9780838633915 a b Bradley I 2012 Water A Spiritual History Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781441167675 Paige JC Harrison LW 1987 Out of the Vapors A Social and Architectural History of Bathhouse Row Hot Springs National Park PDF U S Department of the Interior Archived from the original PDF on 2014 01 14 Water Sanitation and Hygiene Bill amp Melinda Gates foundation 2001 Retrieved 2020 10 04 Matterer JL Daily Life Gode Cookery Tales of the Middle Ages Retrieved 22 February 2017 History Global Handwashing Partnership 19 March 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2015 Majeed A 22 December 2005 How Islam changed medicine BMJ 331 7531 1486 1487 doi 10 1136 bmj 331 7531 1486 ISSN 0959 8138 PMC 1322233 PMID 16373721 Ṭahara Islam Britannica Hasan I 2006 Muslims in America AuthorHouse p 144 ISBN 978 1 4259 4243 4 Kidd J Rees R Tudor R 2000 Life in Medieval Times Heinemann p 165 ISBN 0435325949 Chant C Goodman D 2005 Pre Industrial Cities and Technology Routledge pp 136 38 ISBN 1134636202 Byrne JP 2012 Encyclopedia of the Black Death ABC CLIO p 29 ISBN 9781598842531 Reid MH 2013 Law and Piety in Medieval Islam Cambridge University Press pp 106 114 189 190 ISBN 9781107067110 Menocal MR Scheindlin RP Sells MA eds 2000 The Literature of Al Andalus Cambridge University Press a b van Sertima I 1992 The Golden Age of the Moor Transaction Publishers p 267 ISBN 978 1 56000 581 0 Lebling RW Jr July August 2003 Flight of the Blackbird Saudi Aramco World 24 33 Archived from the original on 2007 12 14 Retrieved 28 January 2008 https www researchgate net publication 303544065 Comparative studies on the effect of locally made black soap and conventional medicated soaps on isolated human skin microflora Mbatha Sandile 99 Zulu Indigenous Practices in Water and Sanitation Preliminary Field Research on Indigenous Practices in Water and Sanitation Conducted at Ulundi al Hassan AY ed 2001 Science and Technology in Islam Technology and applied sciences The Different Aspects of Islamic Culture Vol 4 UNESCO pp 73 74 Kalin I 2014 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Science and Technology in Islam Oxford University Press p 137 ISBN 9780199812578 Bistline RG Jr 1996 Anionic and Related Lime Soap Dispersants In Stache HW ed Anionic Surfactants Organic Chemistry Surfactant science series Vol 56 CRC Press p 632 ISBN 0 8247 9394 3 Gregg P 1981 King Charles I London Dent p 218 ISBN 9780460044370 OCLC 9944510 McNeil I 1990 An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology Taylor amp Francis pp 203 205 ISBN 978 0 415 01306 2 Archived from the original on 2016 05 05 Newell S 2006 International Encyclopaedia of Tribal Religion Christianity and tribal religions Ohio University Press p 40 ISBN 9780821417096 Grypma S 2008 Healing Henan Canadian Nurses at the North China Mission 1888 1947 University of British Columbia Press p 27 ISBN 9780774858212 the Gospel of Christ was central to the missionary aspect of missionary nursing the gospel of soap and water was central to nursing aspect of their works Thomas K 2011 Securing the City Neoliberalism Space and Insecurity in Postwar Guatemala Duke University Press pp 180 181 ISBN 9780822349587 Christian hygiene existed and still exists as one small but ever important part of this modernization project Hygiene provides an incredibly mundane deeply routinized marker of Christian civility Identifying the rural poor as The Great Unwashed Haymaker published Christian pamphlets on health and hygiene of personal hygiene filled with soap toothpaste and floss attempt to shape Christian Outreach and Ethnicity Bauman CM 2008 Christian Identity and Dalit Religion in Hindu India 1868 1947 Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 160 ISBN 9780802862761 Along with the use of allopathic medicine greater hygiene was one of the most frequently mobilized markers of the boundary between Christians and other communities of Chhattisgarh The missionaries had made no secret of preaching soap along with salvation Baral KC 2005 Between Ethnography and Fiction Verrier Elwin and the Tribal Question in India North Eastern Hill University Press p 151 ISBN 9788125028123 where slavery was in vogue Christianity advocated its end and personal hygiene was encouraged Taylor JG 2011 Cleanliness and Culture Indonesian Histories Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies pp 22 23 ISBN 9789004253612 Cleanliness and Godliness These examples indicate that real cleanliness was becoming the preserve of Europeans and it has to be added of Christianity Soap became an attribute of God or rather the Protestant Choi H 2009 Gender and Mission Encounters in Korea New Women Old Ways Seoul California Series in Korean Studies Vol 1 University of California Press p 83 ISBN 9780520098695 In this way Western forms of hygiene health care and child rearing became an important part of creating the modern Christian in Korea Channa S 2009 The Forger s Tale The Search for Odeziaku Indiana University Press p 284 ISBN 9788177550504 A major contribution of the Christian missionaries was better health care of the people through hygiene Soap tooth powder and brushes came to be used increasingly in urban areas Thomas J 2015 Evangelising the Nation Religion and the Formation of Naga Political Identity Routledge p 284 ISBN 9781317413981 cleanliness and hygiene became an important marker of being identified as a Christian a b Z Wahrman M 2016 The Hand Book Surviving in a Germ Filled World University Press of New England pp 46 48 ISBN 9781611689556 Water plays a role in other Christian rituals as well In the early days of Christianity two to three centuries after Christ the lavabo Latin for I wash myself a ritual handwashing vessel and bowl was introduced as part of Church service Pedersen KS 1999 Is the Church of Ethiopia a Judaic Church PDF Warszawskie Studia Teologiczne 12 2 203 216 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2020 05 29 Liddell HG Scott R ὑgieinos A Greek English Lexicon Perseus Liddell HG Scott R ὑgihs A Greek English Lexicon Perseus Liddell HG Scott R ὑgieia A Greek English Lexicon Perseus External links edit nbsp Wikipedia s health care articles can be viewed offline with the Medical Wikipedia app nbsp Look up hygiene in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Sanitary Science Hygiene at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Hand hygiene at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control Water Sanitation and Hygiene at the World Health Organization Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hygiene amp oldid 1207288824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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