‘Gross’ messaging increases hand washing behavior



Ultraviolet light may help relieve pain in fibromyalgia syndrome patients, according to a preliminary study at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center conducted by dermatology, rheumatology, and public health sciences researchers. A report on the study appears in the January issue of the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. Steven R. Feldman, M.D., Ph.D.,

Full Post: Tanning beds provide potential pain relief for fibromyalgia patients

Research conducted by University of Denver (DU) Associate Professor Renée Botta suggests that it takes “gross” messaging to get undergraduate students to wash their hands more frequently after going to the bathroom.

In fall quarter 2007, researchers posted messages in the bathrooms of two DU undergraduate residence halls. The messages said things like, “Poo on you, wash your hands” or “You just peed, wash your hands,” and contained vivid graphics and photos. The messages resulted in increased handwashing among females by 26 percent and among males by 8 percent.

“Fear of spreading germs or getting sick by not washing didn’t mean much to students,” says Botta, the lead author of the study and an associate professor in the Department of Mass Communications and Journalism Studies. “What got their attention was the knowledge that they might be walking around with “gross things” on their hands if they didn’t wash.”

Observations in two control dorms over the same four-week period showed handwashing decreased 2 percentage points among females and 21.5 percentage points among males.

“We tried gross messages, germ messages and you’ll-get-sick messages. And the only ones that stuck was gross,” says Assistant Director of Health Promotions Katie Dunker, one of a team of five who conducted the pilot study. “We found that the ‘gross factor’ is what works, and we were able to increase hand washing behavior by a lot.”

The findings are generating interest. Universities including UC Santa Barbara, Wyoming, Colorado State and CU-Colorado Springs want to borrow DU’s techniques in hopes of improving student handwashing behavior on their campuses.

“The relevance of the message is really, really important,” she says. “You can threaten that they’ll get the flu or promise a flu-free winter, but if they don’t really care about that, your message is going to fall flat,” Botta says.

What was clear, she adds, was that the grossness campaign brought positive results not only in the study but also in a campus emergency that broke out last April. A week before the study was to be expanded to the entire University, a Norovirus outbreak made 63 students ill over a four-day period. Handwashing was identified as an important way to prevent the disease from spreading.

http://www.du.edu/

Link



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Posts:


Elementary school students will eat more whole grains when healthier bread products are gradually introduced into their school lunches, a new University of Minnesota study shows. Whole grain breads are strongly recommended as part of a healthy diet, but children and pre-teens won’t always eat them. For this study, researchers from the university’s department of

Full Post: Young children eat more whole grains when it’s gradually added to school lunch



Sleep helps the mind learn complicated tasks and helps people recover learning they otherwise thought they had forgotten over the course of a day, research at the University of Chicago shows. Using a test that involved learning to play video games, researchers showed for the first time that people who had “forgotten” how to perform

Full Post: Sleep helps the mind learn complicated tasks



Many children love sending and receiving text messages through their cell phones - sometimes to the great annoyance of their parents. But now a new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill suggests this technology could be used to reduce children’s chances of becoming overweight or obese later in life, by helping

Full Post: Text messaging could help children to stay a healthy weight



In what has been termed a landmark new study, it is suggested that wearing masks and washing hands prevents the spread of flu-like symptoms. While this may seem to many to be a case of the blatantly obvious, the study is apparently a “first-of-its-kind” examination of the effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical interventions in controlling the spread

Full Post: Protect yourself from flu by wearing a mask and washing your hands



New industry-supported research from Finland suggests that Cervarix, an HPV vaccine given to girls in Europe and elsewhere, is safe for boys as well. “The results show that the vaccine does generate an immune response and is generally well-tolerated,” said study co-author Gary Dubin, M.D., of vaccine maker GlaxoSmithKline. It is not clear, however, whether

Full Post: Immunogenicity and safety of human papillomavirus vaccine in healthy boys --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------