key: cord-0918965-wv7dhubh authors: Assefa, Desta; Melaku, Tsegaye title: Commercial Hand Sanitizers use amid COVID-19 Pandemic: the Concerns of Antimicrobial Resistance date: 2021-06-10 journal: Infect Drug Resist DOI: 10.2147/idr.s317767 sha: 53f0cc3ea3d13efa4dcc94aa4c7ece865b300216 doc_id: 918965 cord_uid: wv7dhubh Following the outbreak of novel coronavirus disease, the rising concerns about the prevalence of alcohol-based hand sanitizers’ inappropriate use and substandard products in the market create an ongoing safety concern. They can cause frequent exposure of microorganisms to below the alcohol concentrations to the range recommended for infection prevention and development of mutations. Thus, it is invaluable to sensitize the scientific community for further researches to provide additional evidence. Additionally, regulation of quality and proper use of alcohol-based hand sanitizers should be effectively promoted. This commentary justifies the impact of COVID-19 on the current and future use of alcohol-based hand sanitizers. Following its outbreak, the contagious novel coronavirus (COVID-19) spread more rapidly across the world. It becomes an unprecedented challenge to global health. [1] [2] [3] [4] Due to no effective antiviral drug discovered yet, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended vaccines and preventive measures to fight and stay safe from it. Especially in developing countries, keeping hand hygiene using soap and water or alcohol-based hand sanitizers (ABHSs) plays an inevitable role in inactivating and preventing the spread. [5] [6] [7] [8] Unless hands are visibly soiled, alcohol-based hand sanitizer is preferred to keep hand hygiene in most healthcare settings and communities during COVID-19. 9-11 It should be due to ABHS is time and cost-effective, available at the point of care, has improved skin tolerance and broad microbiological spectrum. Thus, the emergent COVID-19 situation caused a sudden spike in demand of ABHSs, generated a substantial shortage in supply, less rigorous quality control, and prevalence of inappropriate use and substandard products in the market. 9, 10, 12, 13 Amid COVID-19, inappropriate use, less rigorous quality control, and the increased prevalence of substandard ABHS products in the markets can create ongoing safety concerns. They can cause frequent microbial exposure to low doses or substandard concentrations of alcohol. It becomes ineffective and leads to the development of mutation. [13] [14] [15] [16] Especially utilizing ABHSs at five moments in the healthcare setting amid COVID-19 can lead to prolonged exposure of susceptible resident bacteria on human hands to below alcoholic concentrations range Open Access Full Text Article recommended for infection prevention. It generates a progressive stepwise accumulation of natural mutations and emerging of alcoholic tolerance in microbes. Because ABHS is the most commonly used disinfectant, the development of resistance mutation can put more burdens on already struggling healthcare professionals and global growing problems in healthcare. [17] [18] [19] It clarifies the chance for the failure of using ABHSs mainly for hygienic hand disinfection in the healthcare setting and community in the near future if the current trend continues. Amid COVID-19, in addition to dynamic human life losses, the inappropriate use and prevalence of substandard alcohol-based sanitizer are highly increased. Misuse and substandard products can lead to common resident bacteria on human hand exposure to a low dose of alcohol (subdisinfecting concentrations). It creates a chance for stepwise accumulation of resistance mutations. In the near future, it can be a great challenge to use ABHSs. Alcohol: Isopropanol, ethanol, n-propanol, or their combinations. Five essential moments: before patient contact, before clean/aseptic procedures, after the risk of body fluids, after patient contact, and after contact with patient surroundings. Resident bacteria on human hands: include Enterococcus faecalis, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Staphylococcus warneri, Acinetobacter lwoffii, Enterobacter cloacae, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Pseudomonas fluorescens/putida, Staphylococcusaureus. Not applicable. Not applicable. Not applicable. Both authors made substantial contributions to conceptualize and design the manuscript. And together, data acquisition, analysis, and interpretation, drafting or revising the article critically for important intellectual content were performed. They agreed to submit to the current journal, gave final approval of the version to be published, and agreed to be accountable for all aspects of the work. There is no funding to report. The authors reported no conflicts of interest for this work. 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Geneva: the Organization Hand hygiene recommendations Hand hygiene guidance Hand washing and hand sanitizer on the skin and COVID-19 infection risk Hand sanitisers amid COVID-19: a critical review of alcohol-based products on the market and formulation approaches to respond to increasing demand Increasing tolerance of hospital Enterococcus faecium to handwash alcohols COVID-19 and frequent use of hand sanitizers; human health and environmental hazards by exposure pathways The pandemic of COVID-19 and its implications for the purity and authenticity of alcohol-based hand sanitizers: the health risks associated with falsified sanitizers and recommendations for regulatory and public health bodies Evolution of high-level resistance during low-level antibiotic exposure Will resistant bacteria be the end of alcohol hand sanitizers Drug Resistance is an international, peer-reviewed openaccess journal that focuses on the optimal treatment of infection (bacterial, fungal and viral) and the development and institution of preventive strategies to minimize the development and spread of resistance. The journal is specifically concerned with the epidemiology of antibiotic resistance and the mechanisms of resistance development and diffusion in both hospitals and the community. The manuscript management system is completely online and includes a very quick and fair peerreview system