Hand sanitizers can be very harmful, especially for children. Toxic hand sanitizers are an urgent issue because their use has skyrocketed since the start of the new virus.
Their correct use is even more important now that children are going back to school, where they will be exposed to hand sanitizer like never before. Plus many hand sanitizers have been recalled for being very harmful to children’s health.
Our skin is our biggest organ, therefore anything we put on our skin that then gets absorbed needs to be scrutinized.
Toxic Hand Sanitizers – Poisoning in Children
A few years ago, when my son was little, I received an alarming e-mail from a friend about another mom’s little daughter who got very sick and was hospitalized after ingesting hand sanitizer.
This is not the first time I had heard about this, and I want to urge everyone — parents, grandparents, caretakers, and teachers — to be very careful with these products!
This little girl, four years old, was very lethargic and incoherent in school, and when they got her to the hospital, she had a very high alcohol level in her system.
The mother did some research and found out that it only takes three squirts of those hand sanitizers to be FATAL for a toddler.
Her daughter’s blood alcohol level compared to drinking something that was 120 proof.
Children are very curious, and since these sanitizers now come in all kinds of flavors and scents, it is understandable that a little child would be curious what this stuff would taste like.
Never ingest alcohol-based hand sanitizer.
If your child is old enough to know not to lick or drink hand sanitizer — should you still be concerned?
Yes, you should, for children and adults.
Ideally, we should avoid hand sanitizer. Soap and water is always the better choice if you wash your hands long enough (20 seconds) with warm water, but now hand sanitizer use is encouraged when water and soap are not available.
Soap and water remove all types of germs from hands — sanitizer acts by killing only certain germs on the skin.
Even I have natural hand sanitizer spray with me when I go out since the outbreak of the latest virus, and I never used to buy these products because I knew how harmful they can be.
They dry out our hands and actually can let in germ into our skin. Excessive hand sanitizer use can lower your immune system response and create stronger bacteria. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, hand sanitizer with antibacterial ingredients can contribute to the development of antibiotic-resistance bacteria. That’s not what we want.
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Especially now, using hand sanitizers the safe way is becoming critically important.
Teach your children that a small amount of hand sanitizer will be enough. The CDC says small children should always be supervised when using hand sanitizer. Make sure they use a small amount, rub their hands until the hand sanitizer has dried, and instruct them not to lick their hands.
Unfortunately, harmful hand sanitizers that have been manufactured with the wrong kind of ingredient, with methanol or 1-propanol that can lead to blindness, other ailments, even death.
Alcohol-based hand sanitizers should only contain ethanol or isopropanol.
Here is the list by the FDA of toxic hand sanitizers that can be life-threatening when absorbed or ingested.
It is very important to check that you didn’t inadvertently buy one of those products, which have been manufactured in Mexico under many different names.
Please alert everyone you know about the potential danger of hand sanitizers!
To be absolutely sure that sanitizer don’t accidentally get ingested by your child, educate everyone taking care of your child how to use these products correctly if washing hands isn’t an option.
If you need to use hand sanitizer on small children, put some on your hands first, then rub it on your child’s hands until they are dry.
Non-Toxic Cleaning Products
I added this info of the products I use in my home years ago when I initially published this post about the dangers of hand sanitizers, before Covid 19.
Obviously, circumstances are very different right now, and we all have to make the choices we feel most comfortable with to eliminate germs in our home, but here are the products I use and like.
I personally don’t have harsh cleaning products in the house. When my son was little, I wanted to guarantee my son wouldn’t be able to ingest them by accident, and I also believe we did just fine growing up without them.
There are so many safe cleaning products that are made from natural ingredients, why would I buy anything else? And you can easily make your own household cleaner with vinegar, etc.
I use Mrs. Meyer’s countertop spray in geranium scent — it makes the whole house smell like a flower shop! Divine.
Sorry, Amazon doesn’t allow bloggers to add pictures of items any longer, but here are the links.
I also really like the whole line of all-natural Shaklee products.
Buying one bottle of their Basic H2 Organic Super Cleaning Concentrate makes 50 or more bottles of cleaners – everything from countertop to degreaser and window cleaner!
I’ve had my Shaklee concentrate for over 10 years now, and because it only takes a couple of drops of cleaner added to a bottle of water to make another bottle of cleaner, it will last me many more years.
Obviously, I don’t even have those green products anywhere near where my son could get into them. I emptied out one of my upper cabinets in the kitchen and store cleaning products there.
In general, I encourage you to buying only green, natural products for all cleaning products you use, or to make them yourself.
You’ll be green, you’ll save your green (money), and you don’t have to worry about your kids being safe from toxic products.
Kristi {at} Live and Love Out Loud says
Oh yes! I remember hearing about this a while back. That stuff is very dangerous, even for stupid adults who ingest it on purpose! It was very smart of you to pass this on, Dagmar.
honeybee says
Thank you very much for sharing. This is very very very very useful information. I am actually hand sanitizer user and i make my 4 year old daughter use it too. Your post make me alert so much of how careless i am. i am going to share this information to everyone i know. Keep up the good work!
Patrish says
Wow! I wouldnt have ever thought of that! Thats crazy. Thanks for sharing the info.
Dagmar says
Thanks for that link, Anna, there is even more great info to find there.
Terri Henry says
Wow…I can’t stand these things either but my Mother-in-law is a nurse and insists on giving us bottles of it. I did come in useful my little one was sick with gastroenteritis as I was cleaning so much poop and he was so distressed at each change, I used this when I needed to pick him up immediately without having a chance to wash my hands. But really it’s vile stuff and I’m glad to have read this post to stick to my true convictions on these things and get rid of it!
Multi-Testing Mommy says
I am with ya on being as green as I can more often than not. I use CleanWell handsanitizer spray.
Can I ask you what you use to clean your kitchen counters and sinks after handling raw chicken? This is my big issue and toilets!
Dagmar says
I don’t cook chicken at home — mostly because preparing it makes me freak out. I never knew how much to clean either, and we happened to become a (mostly) vegetarian household last year.
Laura says
Not only that, but it is also a reason why we, as a country, are actually getting sicker, our immune systems are unable to do what it was meant to do.
That poor little girl!
Jamie H says
I was going to say the SAME THING! Our germaphobic society is the reason super bugs exist now. I’m a nurse and I don’t even carry hand sanitizer in my purse. I wash my hands on a regular basis (especially after going to germy places) and that’s all I need. Most germs out in public our bodies can handle naturally.
Cure for hands says
Hands are the most uncared for part of our body. But it is equally important to care for hands. One can brush off dead cells by rubbing it with spoilt milk or blend sugar with olive oil and massage it. Apply good moisturiser, jojoba or olive oil.
Maggie Brown says
I have a great suggestion for a chemical-free and safe way keep young children from spreading those germs! My daughter learned this great program in daycare called Germy Wormy Germ Awareness for Germ Transportation Vehicles ages 2 -7. Now we no longer play the “pass the germs” game! It is mom-invented, drug-free and safe way to teach kids how to both avoid AND keep from spreading germs.
http://www.germywormy.com
Give kids a PLACE to give their germs to, instead of YOU!
Six Feet Under Blog says
Thanks for the heads up!