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Hand sanitizer

Hand sanitizer
A hand sanitizer or hand antiseptic[1] is a supplement or alternative to hand washing with soap and water. Various
preparations are available, including gel, foam, and liquid solutions. The active ingredient in hand sanitizers may be
isopropanol, ethanol, n-propanol, or povidone-iodine. Inactive ingredients in alcohol rubs typically include a
thickening agent such as polyacrylic acid for alcohol gels, humectants such as glycerin for liquid rubs, propylene
glycol, and essential oils of plants. Alcohol based hand sanitizers are more effective at killing germs than soaps and
do not dry out hands as much.[2] Popular alcohol rub brands include Purell, GermX, IC Gel, Deb InstantFoam, Deb
Microsan, Labo, Aqium, Avant, GermOut, and Aquawet. Lysol, and Method Products also produce popular
alcohol-based hand sanitizers. Common non-alcohol, rinse-free hand sanitizer brands use either small concentrations
of the nitrogenous cationic surface-acting agent benzalkonium chloride or the chlorinated aromatic compound
triclosan or povidone-iodine. These brands include Gold Bond Ultimate, MicroArmor, Hy5, Soapopular, SHBAN,
and Handclens. Other non-alcohol sanitizer brands in the USA such as Cleanwell and StaSafe claim to kill germs
naturally, although these claims are not substantiated in any FDA monograph. All hand sanitizer products require
NDC designation in United States and NPN designation in Canada. Hand sanitizer is controlled as a biocide in
Europe.
In recent years, some brands started combining alcohol rubs with natural products and essential oils to provide
luxury lines for the growing skin care industry.[3] Such brands include Burt's Bees, EO, Frais, Jao and The Body
Shop. These luxury products contain the 60% alcohol necessary to kill germs effectively and safely, but employ
additional ingredients to moisturize and condition the skin.

Uses
Consumer alcohol-based hand sanitizers, and health care hand alcohol or alcohol hand antiseptic agents, are
antiseptic products used to avoid transmission of pathogens. These exist in liquid, foam, and easy-flowing gel
formulations. The level of alcohol varies between 60% and 85%. The most commonly used level is 62%.
Alcohol rub sanitizers kill most bacteria, fungi and some viruses. Alcohol rub sanitizers containing at least 70%
alcohol, kill 99.9% of the bacteria on hands 30 seconds after application and 99.99% to 99.999%[4] in one minute.[5]
Even so, assuming 99.999% germs killed, in 5:20, the effect wears off.
When hands are not visibly dirty, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and many other
world public health authorities recommend alcohol hand sanitizers as an acceptable alternative to soap and water for
hand hygiene.[6]
The CDC Clean Hands campaign instructs the public how to use hand sanitizer properly:
When using an alcohol-based hand sanitizer:
Apply product to the palm of one hand.
Rub hands together.
Rub the product over all surfaces of hands and fingers until hands are dry.
[7]

The Mayo Clinic adds:


Apply enough of the product to the palm of your hand to wet your hands completely.
Rub your hands together, covering all surfaces until they're dry.
If your hands are visibly dirty, however, wash with soap and water.[8]
For health care, optimal disinfection requires attention to all exposed surfaces such as around the fingernails,
between the fingers, on the back of the thumb, and around the wrist. Hand alcohol should be thoroughly rubbed into

Hand sanitizer
the hands and on the lower forearm for a duration of at least 30 seconds and then allowed to air dry. [9] To minimize
carryover, jewelry should be removed from hands during use.
The Mayo Clinic recommends washing hands or sanitizing
before preparing food, eating, treating wounds or giving medicine, touching a sick or injured person,
inserting or removing contact lenses
after preparing food (especially raw meat or poultry), using the toilet, changing a diaper, touching an
animal or animal toys, leashes or waste, blowing your nose, coughing or sneezing into your hands, treating
wounds, touching a sick or injured person, handling garbage or something that could be contaminated, such
as a cleaning cloth or soiled shoes.[8]
Despite common perceptions, alcohol-based hand sanitizers are well-adapted to the skin. Use of alcohol-based hand
gels dries skin less, (significantly decreases epidermis water content), than hand washing with soap and water. [10]
[11] [12] [13]

Alcohol is considered haraam, or forbidden, in Islamic tradition. However, Islamic scholars such as Dr. Rajab Abu
Mleeh state that the alcohol in hand sanitizer used as medicine is halal, or permissible, in Islam. He claims that
protection against disease is among the aims that Muslims are commanded to pursue, so it is permissible to touch
alcohol even if it is indisputably impure according to Islamic law.[14] The Muslim Council of Britain concurs. [15]
Studies show that when used as directed, the alcohol in hand sanitizer evaporates and is not absorbed significantly
through the skin so it cannot cause intoxication.[16]

Effectiveness
The Centers for Disease Control says the most important way to prevent the transmission of dangerous diseases is to
frequently wash your hands with soap and water and/or use a hand sanitizer. If soap and water are not available it is
recommended to use a hand sanitizer that contains at least 60 percent alcohol.[17] [18] Alcohol rubs kill many
different kinds of bacteria, including antibiotic resistant bacteria and TB bacteria. It also has high viricidal activity
against many different kinds of viruses, including enveloped viruses such as the flu virus, the common cold virus,
and HIV, though is notably ineffective against the rabies virus.[19] [20] [21] Alcohol rub sanitizers are not very
effective against Norovirus (winter vomiting virus) unless they are combined with benzalkonium chloride in a hand
sanitizer.[22] Alcohol rubs also kill fungi.[23] University of Virginia Medical School researchers concluded that hand
sanitizing is more effective against fighting the common cold than hand washing.[24] Alcohol kills both pathogenic
(disease causing) microorganisms as well as resident bacterial flora, which generally do not cause illness. [25]
Research shows that alcohol hand sanitizers do not pose any risk by eliminating "good" germs that are naturally
present on the skin. The body quickly replenishes the good germs on the hands, often moving them in from just up
the arms where there are fewer harmful germs.[26] Alcohol also strips the skin of the outer layer of oil, which may
have negative effects on barrier function of the skin. However, washing with detergents, such as commonly used
hand soaps, results in a greater barrier disruption of skin compared to alcohol solutions, suggesting a increased loss
of skin lipids.[27] [28]
According to Rotter (1999), alcohol rubs are approximately 100 times more effective against viruses than any form
of hand washing. Isopropyl alcohol will instantly kill 99.99 percent or more of all non-spore forming bacteria in less
than 30 seconds, both in the laboratory and on human skin.[17] [29] A controlled study of 200 workers at FedEx in
2004 showed that placing hand sanitizer dispensers in an office and educating workers about their use resulted in a
21% reduction in absenteeism.[30] Controlled studies showed an even greater reduction in absenteeism (51%) in
elementary schools[31] and college dormitories (43%).[32]
The alcohol in hand sanitizers may not have the 1015 seconds exposure time required to denature proteins and lyse
cells in too low quantities (0.3 mL) or concentrations (below 60%).[33] Mackintosh (1984) found that application of
0.3 milliliters alcohol rub to the hands was no more effective than plain soap-and-water hand washing, but that

Hand sanitizer
increasing the volume to 0.5 milliliters increased the effectiveness of alcohols substantially.[34] In environments with
high lipids or protein waste (such as food processing), the use of alcohol hand rubs alone may not be sufficient to
ensure proper hand hygiene).[33]
Researchers at East Tennessee State University found that products with alcohol concentrations as low as 40% are
available in American stores.[35] For health care settings like hospitals and clinics, optimum alcohol concentration to
kill germs is 70% to 95 %.[36] [37]
Not all forms of bacterial pathogens are equally susceptible. Certain spores of endospore forming bacteria, especially
the endospores of gram positive bacteria (e.g. Clostridium difficile) are relatively resistant to sanitizers and soap and
water and remain biologically viable after their use. During the anthrax attacks on the United States Postal Service,
authorities warned that alcohol hand rubs and soap and water would not kill anthrax endospores but they will kill the
anthrax bacteria.
Some medical opinions question the effectiveness of alcohol-based hand sanitizers for preventing influenza. Dr.
Arthur Reingold, vaccine specialist who has advised for the WHO, worries that "in the determination to tell people
what they can do to protect themselves, people pooh-pooh things like masks, which really are effective against
influenza, and are reluctant to get vaccinated." He claims that "washing hands really is wonderful for preventing
many diseases, such as the common cold, but it's not very helpful to prevent influenza, [and that] studies done 40 and
50 years ago pretty much show it's impossible to get influenza through hand-to-hand contact". Instead, he says that
"you must breathe the virus [right] into your lungs". [38] In the same lay press article, Dr. Bonnie Henry, Director of
Public Health Emergency Management at the B.C. Centre for Disease Control, agrees with Reingold that the
principal way to get swine flu is by breathing the virus right into your lungs. However, she says animal studies have
shown that the virus can infect you through your nose, your throat, and even through the tear ducts of your eyes.[38]
For example, research into the transmission of influenza from swine to humans has shown a statistically significant
reduction in transmission if the handler wears gloves when working with sick animals, therefore implying that there
is a distinct danger of catching the influenza virus via hand-to-face transmission.[39] That opinion is shared by US
Public Health, CDC and WHO officials, who therefore agree that washing the hands with soap and water or the use
of a hand sanitizer (and not touching eyes, nose or mouth) are important measures to help prevent the spread of
influenza.
Dr. Peter Palese, a professor of medicine and infectious diseases at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York
City, has said that hand washing isn't all that helpful against the flu because the flu isn't like other respiratory
diseases. "The flu virus isn't very stable on the hand," he said. "The virus has a lipid membrane that flattens out when
it's on your hand, and it gets inactivated." [40] However Mark Nicas, an adjunct professor at the University of
California-Berkeley School of Public Health, maintains that a significant number of flu cases are indeed spread by
hands touching one another, and then touching your eyes, nose or mouth. "I think that hand contact accounts for
maybe one-third of influenza infections," he says.[40] Furthermore, whereas the influenza virus can survive for only
minutes on a person's hands, researchers have found that it can survive for hours (some say even days) on many
other surfaces.[41] The University of Minnesota Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP)
produced a document[42] which says: Studies have shown that influenza viruses can survive on environmental
surfaces and can infect a person for up to 2 to 8 hours after being deposited on an environmental surface if the
person touches that surface and then touches his or her eyes, nose or mouth.
Research by Dr. Ronald Turner found that there was no statistically significant advantage to using hand sanitizers to
prevent the flu or rhinovirus infection.[43]

Hand sanitizer

Non-alcohol Hand Sanitizers


Some hand sanitizer products use agents other than alcohol to kill germs, such as benzalkonium chloride or triclosan.
Laboratory studies have shown lingering benzalkonium chloride may be associated with antibiotic resistance in
MRSA [44] [45] while no mechanism for resistance to alcohol has ever been described in bacteria.[46] In addition,
benzalkonium chloride is rated as a level 7 high hazard in the Cosmetics Safety Database.[47] Although they also
indicate a significant gap in studies regarding the toxicity of Benzalkonium Chloride, particularly at the low level
present in non-alcohol sanitizers. Where alcohol sanitizers utilize 62%, or higher, alcohol by weight, only .1 to .13%
of Benzalkonium Chloride by weight provides equivalent antimicrobial effectiveness. More worrying, it should be
noted that Benzalkonium Chloride is the active ingredient in Bactine Antiseptic Spray, the universal antiseptic that
has been used on open wounds and childhood scrapes for decades, at an amount higher than that present in the most
popular non-alcohol sanitizers.
Triclosan is rated as a level 7 high hazard in the Cosmetics Safety Database.[48] Triclosan has been shown to
accumulate in biosolids in the environment, one of the top seven organic contaminants in waste water according to
the National Toxicology Program[49] Triclosan leads to various problems with natural biological systems,[50] and
triclosan, when combined with chlorine e.g. from tap water, produces dioxins, a probable carcinogen in humans.[51]
However, 90-98% of triclosan in waste water biodegrades by both photolytic or natural biological processes or is
removed due to sorption in waste water treatment plants. Numerous studies show that only very small traces are
detectable in the effluent water that reaches rivers.[52]
A series of studies show that photodegradation of triclosan produced 2,4-dichlorophenol and
2,8-dichlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (DCDD). The 2,4-dichlorophenol itself is known to be biodegradable as well as
photodegradable (European Commission 2000). For DCDD, one of the non-toxic compounds of the dioxin family, a
conversion rate of 1% has been reported and estimated half-lives suggest that it is photolabile as well (Aranami et al.
2007). The formation-decay kinetics of DCDD are also reported by Sanchez-Prado et al. (2006) who claim
"transformation of triclosan to toxic dioxins has never been shown and is highly unlikely." [53]
Alcohol-free hand sanitizers may be effective immediately while on the skin, but the solutions themselves can
become contaminated because alcohol is an in-solution preservative and without it, the alcohol-free solution itself is
succeptible to contamination. However even alcohol containing hand sanitizers can become contaminated if the
alcohol content is not properly controlled or the sanitizer is grossly contaminated with microorganisms during
manufacture. In June, 2009, alcohol-free Clarcon Antimicrobial Hand Sanitizer was pulled from the US market by
the FDA which found the product contained gross contamination of extremely high levels of various bacteria,
including those which can "cause opportunistic infections of the skin and underlying tissues and could result in
medical or surgical attention as well as permanent damage". This is a perfect example of a hand sanitizer that was
poorly and improperly manufactured, not following "current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMPs) or FDA
regulations. Gross contamination of any hand sanitizer by bacteria during manufacture will result in the failure of the
effectiveness of that sanitizer and possible infection of the treatment site with the contaminating organisms.[54]

Safety
Alcohol gel can catch fire, producing a dim blue flame. This is due to the flammable alcohol in the gel. Some hand
sanitizer gels may not produce this effect due to a high concentration of water or moisturizing agents. There have
been some rare instances where alcohol has been implicated in starting fires in the operating room, including a case
where alcohol used as an antiseptic pooled under the surgical drapes in an operating room and caused a fire when a
cautery instrument was used. Alcohol gel was not implicated. To minimize the risk of fire, alcohol rub users are
instructed to rub their hands until dry, which indicates that the flammable alcohol has evaporated.[55] Fire
departments suggest refills for the alcohol-based hand sanitizers can be stored with cleaning supplies away from heat
sources or open flames. (Ohio OAC 1301:7-7-3405.5)

Hand sanitizer

Ethyl alcohol (Ethanol), the active ingredient utilized in alcohol hand sanitizers is rated as a 5, moderate hazard in
the Cosmetics Safety Database. Concerns include: Cancer, Developmental and reproductive toxicity, Organ system
toxicity (non-reproductive), Multiple, additive exposure sources, Irritation (skin, eyes, or lungs), Enhanced skin
absorption, Occupational hazards. [56]
The US FDA controls antimicrobial handsoaps and sanitizers as over-the-counter drugs because they are intended for
topical anti-microbial use to prevent disease in humans.[57] The FDA requires strict labeling which informs
consumers as to proper use of this OTC drug and dangers to avoid, including warning adults not to ingest, not to use
in the eyes, to keep out of the reach of children, and to allow children to use only under adult supervision.[58]
According to the American Association of Poison Control Centers, there were nearly 12,000 cases of hand sanitizer
ingestion in 2006.[59] If ingested, alcohol-based hand sanitizers can cause alcohol poisoning in small children.[60]
Despite widespread stories or rumors circulating regarding deaths or violent illnesses from ingestion, there is no
evidence to support such claims.[42] However, the Centers for Disease Control recommends using hand sanitizer with
children to promote good hygiene, under supervision, and furthermore recommends parents pack hand sanitizer for
their children when traveling, to avoid their contracting disease from dirty hands.[61]
There have been cases reported of people drinking the gel (with mixers) in prisons and hospitals to become
intoxicated leading to its withdrawal from some establishments. [62]

Hospital environment
Alcohol based hand rubs are extensively used in the hospital
environment as an alternative to antiseptic soaps. Hand-rubs in the
hospital environment have two applications: hygienic hand rubbing
and surgical hand disinfection. Alcohol based hand rubs provide a
better skin tolerance as compared to antiseptic soap.[13] Hand rubs also
prove to have more effective microbiological properties as compared to
antiseptic soaps.
The same ingredients used in over-the-counter hand-rubs are also used
in hospital hand-rubs: alcohols such ethanol and isopropanol,
sometimes combined with quats (quaternary ammonium cations) such
as benzalkonium chloride. Quats are added at levels up to 200 parts per
million to increase antimicrobial effectiveness. Although allergy to
alcohol-only rubs is rare, fragrances, preservatives and quats can cause
contact allergies.[63] These other ingredients do not evaporate like
alcohol and accumulate leaving a "sticky" residue until they are
removed with soap and water.

Hand alcohol in a hospital

The most common brands of alcohol hand rubs include Avant, Sterillium, Desderman and Allsept S. All hospital
hand rubs must conform to certain regulations like EN 12054 for hygienic treatment and surgical disinfection by
hand-rubbing. Products with a claim of 99.99% reduction or 4Log reduction are ineffective in hospital
environment, since the reduction must be more than 99.99%.[5]
The hand sanitizer dosing systems for hospitals are designed to deliver a measured amount of the product for staff.
They are dosing pumps screwed onto a bottle or are specially designed dispensers with refill bottles. Dispensers for
surgical hand disinfection are usually equipped with elbow controlled mechanism or infrared sensors to avoid any
contact between with the pump.

Hand sanitizer

Surgical hand disinfection


Hands must be disinfected before any surgical procedure by hand washing with mild soap, if hands are visibly dirty,
and then hand-rubbing with a sanitizer. Surgical disinfection requires a larger dose of the hand-rub and a longer
rubbing time than ordinarily. It is usually done in two applications according to specific hand-rubbing techniques,
EN1499 (hygienic handwash), and EN 1500 (hygienic hand disinfection) to ensure that antiseptic is applied
everywhere on the surface of the hand.[64]

Image gallery

Alcohol liquid a
type of alcohol rub

Colourless alcohol gel

Aloe hand sanitizer

Notes
[1] "Tentative Final Monograph for Health-Care Antiseptic Drug Products; Proposed Rule" (http:/ / www. fda. gov/ OHRMS/ DOCKETS/ ac/
05/ briefing/ 2005-4184B1_01_16-FDA-TAB15. pdf). Federal Register 21 CFR Parts 333 and 369 (United States Federal Government) 74
(56): 1261312617. March 2009. .
[2] "Alcohol Hand Rub and Hand Hygiene" (http:/ / www. cec. health. nsw. gov. au/ pdf/ AlcoholHandRub061013. pdf) (PDF). Clinical
Excellence Commission, Health, New South Wales, Australia. . Retrieved 2007-05-18.
[3] M.O. (March 2009). "Vital Beauty, Soothing Hand Sanitizers" (http:/ / www. naturalhealthmag. com). Natural Health Magazine. pp.22. .
[4] research papers often use "n-log" to mean a reduction of n on a (base 10) logarithmic scale graphing the number of bacteria, thus "5-log"
means a reduction by a factor of 105, or 99.999%
[5] Rotter M. (1999). "Hand washing and hand disinfection". Hospital epidemiology and infection control 87.
[6] "Hand Hygiene FAQ" (http:/ / www. cdc. gov/ oralhealth/ infectioncontrol/ faq/ hand. htm). Infection Control in Dental Settings. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. July 15, 2006. . Retrieved 2007-02-01.
[7] "Clean Hands Save Lives!" (http:/ / www. cdc. gov/ cleanhands/ ). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. November 19, 2009. .
[8] "Mayo Clinic staff" (Oct. 16, 2009). "Hand washing: Do's and don'ts, How to use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer" (http:/ / www. mayoclinic.
com/ health/ hand-washing/ HQ00407). Mayo Clinic. .
[9] Girou, Emmanuelle; Sabrina Layou, Patrick Legrand, Francoise Oppein, and Christian Brun-Buisson (August 2002). "Efficacy of
handrubbing with alcohol based solution versus standard handwashing with antiseptic soap: randomised clinical trial" (http:/ / www. bmj.
com/ cgi/ content/ full/ 325/ 7360/ 362). British Medical Journal 325 (362): 362. doi:10.1136/bmj.325.7360.362. PMID12183307.
PMC117885. . Retrieved 2009-10-16.
[10] L.K. Pedersen, E. Held, J.D. Johansen, T. Agner (2005). "Less skin irritation from alcohol-based disinfectant than from detergent used for
hand disinfection" (http:/ / www. biomedexperts. com/ Abstract. bme/ 16307649/
Less_skin_irritation_from_alcohol-based_disinfectant_than_from_detergent_used_for_hand_disinfection). British Journal of Dermatology
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[11] Kynemund Pedersen, Elisabeth Held, Jeanne Duus Johansen, Tove Agner (2005). "Short-term effects of alcohol-based disinfectant and
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Hand sanitizer
[12] Boyce, John M. (July 2000). "Using Alcohol for Hand Antisepsis: Dispelling Old Myths" (http:/ / www. journals. uchicago. edu/ doi/ abs/
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Hand sanitizer

Sources
See also

Air sanitizer
Hand washing
Soap
Antibacterial soap
Rubbing alcohol
Ignaz Semmelweis

External links
"Executive Summary: National Stakeholders Meeting on Alcohol-Based Hand-Rubs and Fire Safety in Health
Care Facilities, July 22, 2003" (http://web.archive.org/web/20080308220645/www.cdc.gov/handhygiene/
firesafety/aha_meeting.htm). American Hospital Association, Co-Hosted by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control & Prevention (CDC) and AHA. Archived from the original (http://www.cdc.gov/handhygiene/
firesafety/aha_meeting.htm) on 2008-03-08.
SkinWearShop (http://www.skinwearshop.com)

Article Sources and Contributors

Article Sources and Contributors


Hand sanitizer Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=399674429 Contributors: 1234r00t, 28bytes, 7&6=thirteen, Abhi741980, Admrboltz, AeonicOmega, Amcbride, Amirman,
Autoerrant, Avenged Eightfold, Badger Drink, Benea, Bowlhover, Bryan121, Bsd987, Bsfr69, Cabbarnuke, ChangChienFu, Chejou, Chelle789, Chemchris, Clarince63, CrazyInSane, Dan100,
Dave Runger, Dbfirs, Dcmuir, Debresser, Defunctzombie, Demian12358, Deor, Dforest, Dinomite, Dmarquard, ERcheck, EarnestyEternity, Electron9, Elkman, Entheta, Escape Orbit, Espoo,
Everyking, Excirial, Ezaliabea, FalconBob, Favonian, Formerly the IP-Address 24.22.227.53, Fratrep, Gilliam, Gobbleswoggler, Graham87, Gregb561, Gurkh123, Gwernol, Gkhan,
InvictaHOG, Istvan, JSHibbard, JamesBWatson, Jessewnickel, Jlcgroup, Joe2832, JohnI, Josefamp, Kairotic, Kappa, Kerryhays, Kevandegrift, Kjinho213, Knulclunk, Kouros, Lbark, Leon7,
Lights, LilHelpa, Love Krittaya, Lukes123, Maddiputman, Malinaccier, Mandarax, Mechanical digger, Mediapioneer, Medicup, Michael Hardy, Morgankevinj huggle, Myki Cassie, Neurodoc,
Newyorxico, Nkutaiba, Obli, Oxymoron83, Pgordon511, Philip Trueman, Pince Nez, Purgatory Fubar, RDBury, Ranya Salem, Rjwilmsi, Rmain, Royli57, Rrburke, Scienceguy2005, Seraphim,
Settie7, SkerHawx, Smokinjoefmontario, Snoopydawg, Soap, Spellcast, Stlow21, T3h 1337 b0y, The Parting Glass, Theresailv, Tktktk, Tlow03, Toddst1, Trevor MacInnis, Uncle Dick,
Villainone, Vox Rationis, Whpq, WikHead, WikiCopter, Wikithisup, WilliamDressler, Wolfkeeper, XRDoDRX, Zaui, Zhou Yu, Zrulli, 186 anonymous edits

Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors


Image:Handsprit.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Handsprit.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Contributors: User:Entheta
Image:Liquid Alcohol Rub.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Liquid_Alcohol_Rub.jpg License: Public Domain Contributors: User:JSHibbard
Image:A bottle of alcohol gel - no label.JPG Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:A_bottle_of_alcohol_gel_-_no_label.JPG License: Public Domain Contributors:
User:Seraphim Whipp
Image:Hand sanitizer with aloe.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Hand_sanitizer_with_aloe.jpg License: Public Domain Contributors:
w:User:ChangChienFuUser:ChangChienFu

License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported
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