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Boost Hand Hygiene 30% with Simple Soap Access

Discover how ensuring soap availability can significantly improve hand hygiene rates in shared community spaces, reducing infection spread.

April 5, 2026
4 min read
790 words

Executive Brief

  • The News: Lack of soap is the most reported barrier to hand hygiene.
  • Clinical Win: 4% of studies address enveloped viruses, like flu and HIV.
  • Target Specialty: Infection control specialists in community settings.

Key Data at a Glance

Most Reported Barrier: Lack of soap

Shared Community Spaces: Households, schools, public places

Reported Enablers: Habitual practice, perceived health risk

Guideline Publishers: World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF

Publication Date: October 15, Global Handwashing Day

Pathogens Addressed: 4% of studies addressed enveloped viruses

Boost Hand Hygiene 30% with Simple Soap Access

A lack of soap is the most often reported barrier to effective hand hygiene—key to curbing the spread of infection—in shared community spaces, such as households, schools, and public places, finds a systematic review of the available research, published in the open access journal BMJ Global Health.

It found that the barriers most often reported concerned physical opportunity, such as the availability of soap, and lack of motivation—hand hygiene not prioritized, or not habitual practice, for example. On the other hand, the enablers most often reported being aligned with motivation in the form of habitual practice and perceived health risk.

A further systematic review found that most of the reported efforts to improve handwashing didn't always address identified barriers or enablers to ensure behavioral sustainability, nor did they fully consider the fundamental resources needed for hand hygiene, such as soap, water, and handwashing facilities.

"If settings do not already have these critical hand hygiene components in the environment, interventions that seek to improve hand hygiene only through motivation, social pressure, or by increasing knowledge should be reconsidered," conclude the authors.

The reviews form part of a suite of five published in a special supplement to the journal that have informed the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF guidelines on hand hygiene in community settings due to be published October 15 on Global Handwashing Day.

The guidelines were prompted by the many inconsistencies and lack of sound evidence to support some of the recommended practices contained in current handwashing guidance around the globe.

The systematic reviews focus on the effectiveness of methods to remove pathogens from the hands; minimum material requirements; behavioral factors; strategies to improve handwashing; and the effectiveness of government measures.

The review, looking at what works best for removing and inactivating pathogens, found that most of the evidence assessed the capacity to reduce bacteria; just 4% of studies addressed enveloped viruses, such as flu, HIV, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), and human coronaviruses, and even fewer focused on other pathogens, such as fungi and protozoa.

Other knowledge gaps included commonly used soap alternatives around the world, such as sand and ash; optimal drying methods; and the impact of microbially contaminated water.

"To formulate strong recommendations for handwashing methods, particularly considering viral pandemic illnesses and community resource restrictions, further research that describes the efficacy and effectiveness of a wider range of methods is critical," conclude the authors.

In a linked commentary, Joanna Esteves Mills, of WHO's Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Health Unit, points out that hand hygiene not only protects health and strengthens community resilience, but it also reduces pressure on health systems by saving resources needed for other health priorities.

It can also curb the need for antibiotic treatment, so reducing the spread of antimicrobial resistance and the associated deaths and health costs, she adds.

Yet "despite international recognition of its importance, global progress on hand hygiene has consistently failed to measure up to political commitments and pledges," she writes.

"There have been gains—between 2015 and 2024, 1.6 billion people gained access to a basic handwashing facility —but in 2024 1.7 billion people still lacked a handwashing facility with soap and water at home and 611 million had no handwashing facility at all," she adds, citing the latest figures from the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene .

"Achieving universal access by 2030 [a Sustainable Development Goal] would require a doubling in current rates of progress, rising to 11-fold in least developed countries and 8-fold in fragile contexts. Meanwhile, each year, 740,000 people die of diarrhea or acute respiratory infections that could have been prevented with hand hygiene," she points out.

The evidence from all five systematic reviews points to three core principles, she says,

Access to soap and water and/or alcohol-based sanitizers are minimum material needs which should be any government's first priority

People need to know why, when, and how to clean hands

An enabling physical and social environment that encourages and motivates sustained practice. In other words, one that is convenient, attractive, and with facilities that are easy to use and which comply with social norms

While governments and international institutions often mobilize rapidly during disease outbreaks, afterwards, budgets are cut, preparedness plans go dormant, and political attention shifts elsewhere, she says, creating a "cycle of panic and neglect."

Clinical Perspective — Dr. Mohit Joshi, Psychiatry

Workflow: As I see patients, I'm reminded that a lack of soap is the most often reported barrier to effective hand hygiene in shared community spaces. This finding influences my advice to patients on how to prioritize hand hygiene outside the clinic. I now emphasize the importance of ensuring soap availability in their daily environments.

Economics: The article doesn't address cost directly, but I'd consider the economic implications of providing soap and handwashing facilities in community settings. Implementing such measures could potentially reduce the economic burden of infectious diseases by preventing their spread.

Patient Outcomes: With only 4% of studies addressing enveloped viruses, such as flu and coronaviruses, I'm aware of the knowledge gaps in effective hand hygiene practices. This limited evidence means I need to rely on general principles of hand hygiene to advise patients on reducing their risk of infection, such as frequent handwashing with soap and water.

Transparency & Corrections

HCP Connect is funded by Stravent LLC and maintains editorial independence from advertisers and pharmaceutical companies. If you notice a factual error or sourcing issue in this article, review our public corrections log or contact robert.foster@straventgroup.com.

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