Reference — Fundamentals
Hand Hygiene Reference
Hand hygiene is the single most effective measure for preventing healthcare-associated infections. This reference covers the two methods of hand hygiene, their specific indications, WHO's 5 Moments framework, and proper technique for nursing practice and NCLEX preparation.
Educational use only. Follow CDC and WHO hand hygiene guidelines and your facility's infection prevention policies. This reference is for nursing education and NCLEX preparation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Why Hand Hygiene Is the Top Priority
Healthcare workers' hands are the primary vehicle for transmitting pathogens between patients, equipment, and the environment. The CDC estimates that handwashing alone could prevent approximately 1 in 3 diarrheal illnesses and 1 in 5 respiratory infections. In healthcare, consistent hand hygiene compliance is directly correlated with reduced HAI rates.
- Hands become contaminated during routine patient care — even without visible soiling
- Microorganisms survive on hands for 2–60 minutes after contact, depending on the organism
- C. difficile spores can survive on environmental surfaces for months — alcohol does not destroy them
- Healthcare worker hand hygiene compliance rates are often below 50% in practice — intentional habit formation is critical
Alcohol-Based Hand Rub vs. Soap and Water
| Alcohol-Based Hand Rub (ABHR) | Soap and Water | |
|---|---|---|
| Preferred for | Most patient care situations when hands are not visibly soiled | Visibly soiled hands; after C. diff and norovirus exposure; before eating; after restroom |
| Alcohol content | Minimum 60% ethanol or isopropanol | Any antimicrobial or plain soap acceptable |
| Technique | Apply to palm; rub all surfaces of hands and fingers until dry (~20 seconds) | Wet → soap → lather 20 seconds → rinse → dry with single-use towel → use towel to turn off faucet |
| Spectrum | Kills most bacteria, fungi, enveloped viruses — does NOT kill C. diff spores or norovirus | Mechanically removes C. diff spores and norovirus (does not kill, but removes from hands) |
| Skin tolerance | Better — less drying with emollient-containing formulations; preferred for repeated use | More drying with repeated use — use lotion to maintain skin integrity |
| Speed | Faster — no sink required; improves compliance | Slower — requires sink access |
WHO 5 Moments of Hand Hygiene
| # | Moment | Why | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Before patient contact | Protect patient from organisms carried on healthcare worker's hands | Before entering the room to perform assessment, before taking vital signs |
| 2 | Before aseptic task | Protect patient from organisms — especially before invasive procedures or handling sterile equipment | Before IV insertion, Foley catheter care, wound dressing change, medication preparation |
| 3 | After body fluid exposure risk | Protect healthcare worker and prevent environmental contamination | After handling specimen, after emptying urinary drainage bag, after wound care |
| 4 | After patient contact | Protect healthcare worker and the healthcare environment from patient's organisms | After completing assessment, after assisting with ADLs, after therapeutic touch |
| 5 | After contact with patient surroundings | Protect healthcare worker and prevent cross-contamination from patient's environment | After touching bed rails, bedside table, IV pump, call light — even without touching the patient |
Special Circumstances
- C. difficile and norovirus: Soap and water is required — ABHR does not destroy spores; mechanical removal is the only effective method with hand hygiene
- Gloves do not replace hand hygiene: Perform hand hygiene before donning gloves and after removing them — gloves can have microperforations and hands become contaminated during removal
- Artificial nails / nail extensions: Prohibited in most clinical settings — they harbor organisms and increase infection transmission risk
- Natural nail length: Keep nails ¼ inch or shorter — longer nails harbor more organisms and increase glove perforation risk
- Rings and jewelry: Minimize or avoid — jewelry harbors organisms and interferes with effective hand hygiene
- Hand hygiene before and after PPE: Perform hand hygiene before donning any PPE and as the last step after complete doffing
NCLEX Quick Tips
- Hand hygiene is the single most effective infection prevention measure — it is almost always the first action on NCLEX
- C. difficile and norovirus: soap and water required — ABHR does NOT kill these organisms
- Hand hygiene is performed even after glove removal — gloves do not substitute for hand hygiene
- WHO 5 Moments: before patient contact, before aseptic task, after body fluid exposure, after patient contact, after contact with patient surroundings
- Moment 5 (after touching patient surroundings) is often tested — hand hygiene is required even if the patient was not directly touched
- ABHR minimum: 60% alcohol; hand washing minimum: 20 seconds lathering time
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Nurses Association (ANA) Standards of Practice · The Joint Commission. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
