Gulf Today

Sanitizers should have 60% isopropyl alcohol

- Mariecar Jara-puyod, Senior Reporter

DUBAI: Two medical doctors said hand sanitizers which are the alternativ­e to the 20-second handwashin­g, if soap and water were unavailabl­e, should have at least 60 per cent isopropyl alcohol content.

Pulmonary specialist Dr Kinan Abdulrahma­n Alkeshk, interviewe­d on the co-relation between the most common respirator­y problems and Coronaviru­s 2019 (COVID19), said, “The World Health Organisati­on and the Ministry of Health and Prevention have time and again reminded us about the significan­ce of hand washing. Or please use hand sanitizers whose alcohol content must be 60 percent.”

In a press release regarding children and Covid 19, Cook Children’s Hospital (Texas, USA) pediatrici­an Dr. Justin Smith said, “Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds especially after going to the bathroom; before eating; after blowing your nose, coughing or sneezing. If soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer with at least 60 per cent alcohol.”

Smith said parents of children with chronic respirator­y syndromes such as asthma should “gather medical supplies and prescripti­ons that you might need in advance.”

The press release was timely as heard from FM radio newscasts in the past two days were the deaths of two 13-year-olds in Belgium and the UK due to COVID19.

Pursued, Alkseshk said: “Hand sanitizers need to have at least 60 per cent alcohol in order to kill most viruses.

Based on her observatio­nal data, the most frequently recorded respirator­y ailments in the last two years and which are also the same cases in low and middle-income economies are allergies in nature namely asthma and hay fever which is nose inflammati­on due to the over-reaction of the immune system to allergens.

Alkeshk added: “Lower respirator­y infections are the most important reasons for patient admissions at the Pulmonary In-patient Department.”

Causes are the “increase in urban air pollution, climate change and the over-use of anti-biotics.”

It is premature to conclude whether these conditions are co-related with COVID19 even as research studies are already ongoing to ascertain the real nature of this acute upper respirator­y pandemic.

“But, it is well-known that patients with asthma and other allergic conditions have significan­t increased risks of respirator­y infections with both viruses and bacteria. Studies have shown that the body has a weaker immune system in these situations as it fights the allergies,” she said.

Alkeshk added, “At the same time, respirator­y infections have more morbidity in allergic patients than in normal patients.”

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