05 May 2026
What’s New for World Hand Hygiene Day 2026? Latest highlights from JHI & IPIP Journals
5 May 2026 marks the World Health Organization's annual World Hand Hygiene Day. Each year their SAVE LIVES: Clean Your Hands campaign focuses global attention on the importance of hand hygiene in healthcare and brings people together in support of hand hygiene improvement globally. This year's Clean Your Hands slogan is 'Action saves lives'.
This year, the editorial team of our journals, Journal of Hospital Infection and Infection Prevention in Practice, present a collection of freely-available, recently published work on varied aspects of hand hygiene.

This year’s World Hand Hygiene Day messaging from WHO highlights a critical challenge: effective hand hygiene and infection prevention and control (IPC) cannot be achieved without a safe, functional built environment. Gaps in access to clean water, adequate sanitation, waste management, and hygiene infrastructure continue to undermine best practice across healthcare settings.

Healthcare‑associated infections (HAIs) remain a persistent risk for patients in hospitals and clinics worldwide, including during public health emergencies. These infections contribute significantly to the burden of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), place immense strain on patients, families, and healthcare workers, and can lead to avoidable death, disability, and increased healthcare costs, ultimately threatening progress towards high‑quality, equitable care.

Evidence consistently shows that many infections acquired during healthcare delivery are preventable. Timely and appropriate hand hygiene, alongside other IPC measures, plays a central role in reducing avoidable harm. Importantly, investment in IPC and hand hygiene delivers high value for money, strengthening health systems and improving outcomes across all income settings.

In the collection featured below, HIS journals – Journal of Hospital Infection (JHI) and Infection Prevention in Practice (IPIP), showcase recent research exploring how knowledge, behaviour, attitudes, and systems shape hand hygiene practice. The papers address challenges such as sustaining effective hand hygiene using alcohol‑based hand rubs, deconstructing the six‑step hand rubbing technique, glove changes during caesarean birth, and the use of 'nudge-based' interventions on hand soap usage. 

Notably, a recent JHI commentary, “World Hand Hygiene Day 2026: integrating hand hygiene into action plans to meet a global target,” has been featured in WHO's advocacy material, highlighting the global relevance of this work.


Articles from JHI journal:

World Hand Hygiene Day 2026 – Action Saves Lives: integrating hand hygiene into action plans to meet a global target.
Kilpatrick and Deeves. JHI, April 2026

Deconstructing the six-step hand rubbing technique for healthcare staff: a mixed methods investigation of efficacy, acceptability and feasibility 
Gozdzielewska et al. JHI, December 2025

Apply enough!—Quality of hand hygiene determined by the volume of handrub provided by touch-free foam dispensers 
Bansaghi et al. JHI, November 2025

First Train-the-Trainers in Hand Hygiene in Uganda: a multilevel evaluation
Aber et al. JHI, December 2025

Changing gloves during caesarean birth: impact on maternity service budgets and capacity 
Stanberry et al. JHI, November 2025

Articles from IPIP journal: 

Patient-reported education regarding hand hygiene and use of non-sterile clinical gloves in an emergency department observation unit 
Melender et al. IPIP, March 2026

Patterns of pathogenic microbial contamination of handwashing sinks change over time following new installations 
Nakamura et al. IPIP, March 2026

Effect of individual feedback on hand hygiene compliance in nursing homes 
Iversen et al. IPIP, March 2026

Determinants of hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers in public and private hospitals of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 
Melaku et al. IPIP, November 2025

Impact of a nudge-based intervention on hand soap usage in a Japanese Hospital: interrupted time series analysis 
Morishita et al. IPIP, December 2025

Journal of Hospital Infection
Infection Prevention in Practice
WHO World Hand Hygiene Day