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Handwashing Angels - High-impact social initiative to change children handwashing behaviour

Handwashing Angels - High-impact social initiative to change children handwashing behaviour

Can we change children’s hygiene behaviour for the good and make handwashing a beautiful ritual? Yes we can. Hand washing with soap is one of the simplest ways to help keep children healthy. Hand hygiene is also one of the prioritized topics on public health agendas worldwide. The World Health Organization raised awareness of the importance of hand hygiene and its impact in preventing the spread of infectious diseases through campaigns such as “Clean Hands Save Lives”. Yet, according to UNICEF, today we see nearly 900 million children that have either limited or no hand washing service at their school and a staggering 47% of schools worldwide do not have handwashing facilities with soap and water.

Most children in developing countries haven’t been raised with hand washing as a priority. Even with the increase in the accessibility of water and soap, it seems difficult to change habits and increase hand hygiene. Determined to break that vicious circle, a global team took a behaviour point of view to build hand hygiene into a daily routine for young children. The team started the ‘Hand Washing Angels’ initiative late 2019 with a ‘blue and behaviour’ design that involved over 4.000 handwash moments of childeren at the Royal Gate School, in Bondo Kenya .

With the help of Diversey, a tailor-made prototype of blue foaming hand soap was developed to provide a new sensorial experience that increased the visibility of the hand washing process. In parallel a 7 step hand washing motivation approach was developed. The global team included nudging and behavior change techniques, applied them to hand washing, and put a habit building mechanism in place to make daily hygiene habits become a reality. Furthermore the field study showed children’s excitement to be extended to the family behaviour at home.

Based on the positive outcomes of this pilot at end of 2019, the team is now aiming to scale across schools on the African continent soon, starting in Uganda. Paul Blankers, one of the team members who witnessed the full pilot at Royal Gate School remarked, “Helping them was nice, empowerment is what they need right now”. The development of the COVID-19 global pandemic, just a few months after the pilot was concluded, highlights the vital importance to make hand washing part of the daily routines among children all over the world and will hopefully help prevent infections.

This high-impact social initiative is a joint effort of Maastricht University | UMIO, Benthurst & Co and Diversey. Edward Huizenga, leading the programme and professor on innovation and behaviour change, remarks, “It is our belief that a passionate team effort leads to behaviour change for the good that really works”. Diversey supports the initiative as part of the Creating Shared Value (CSV) program.

More information? Please reach out to Edward Huizenga at edward.huizenga@benthurst.com or call 31-6-38077766

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