Hand contamination and hand hygiene knowledge and practices among commercial transport users after the SARS-CoV-2 virus (COVID-19) scare, Enugu State, Nigeria
Ifeanyi O. Aguzie, Ahaoma M. Obioha, Chisom E. Unachukwu, Onyekachi J. Okpasuo, Toochukwu J. Anunobi, Kenneth O. Ugwu, Patience O. Ubachukwu, Uju M. E. Dibua, Khadime Sylla, Khadime Sylla

TL;DR
This study found that commercial transport users in Nigeria have poor hand hygiene practices and high microbial contamination, despite knowing the importance of hand hygiene.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into microbial contamination and hand hygiene practices among commercial transport users in Enugu State, Nigeria.
Findings
High prevalence of fungal (90.0%) and bacterial (87.0%) species were found on participants' hands.
E. coli was the most prevalent bacterial species in both Enugu and Nsukka commercial park users.
Despite high awareness, compliance with hand hygiene practices was low except for after using the toilet and before eating.
Abstract
Contaminated hands are one of the most common modes of microorganism transmission that are responsible for many associated infections in healthcare, food industries, and public places such as transportation parks. Public health approaches during COVID-19 pandemic have shown that hand hygiene practices and associated knowledge are critical measure to control the spread of infectious agent. Hence, assessment of commercial transport users’ knowledge, belief and practices on hand hygiene, and potential contamination with infectious agents which is the aim of the study, aligns with general health concern of quantifying contamination risk levels to predict disease outbreaks. This study utilized a randomized sampling approach to select 10 frequently used commercial parks within two districts in the State: Enugu and Nsukka. The parameters analysed include a cross-sectional questionnaire survey,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfection Control in Healthcare · COVID-19 epidemiological studies · Vaccine Coverage and Hesitancy
