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What's New?
(latest update: November 6, 2009)
Handwashing |
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With Flu Season upon us, it’s a good time to review when to wash hands in child care and early education programs:
Wash hands upon arrival for the day or when moving from one child care group to another.
Wash hands before and after:
- Eating
- Handling food
- Feeding a child
- Giving medication
- Playing in water and playing with toys used by more than one person
Wash hands after:
- Diapering
- Using the toilet or helping a child use a toilet
- Handling bodily fluid (mucus, blood, vomit), from sneezing, wiping and blowing noses, from mouths, or from sores
- Handling uncooked food, especially raw meat and poultry
- Handling animals or cleaning up animal waste
- Playing in sandboxes, and outdoors in general
- Cleaning or handling the garbage
- Smoking
For posters on handwashing, go to:
California Childcare Health Program (English, Spanish)
Global Healthy Child Care Healthy Handwashing Poster
North Carolina Child Care Health and Safety Resource Center
For updates on the Flu season and particularly new CDC releases on Child Care Program Guidance with regard to H1N1 Flu, go to: http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/childcare/toolkit/
New/revised state child care regulations posted on the NRC website during
the month of October:
Welcome to the National Resource Center for
Health and Safety in Child Care (NRC)
The National Resource Center is located at the
University of
Colorado Denver in Denver, Colorado, and is
funded by the Maternal
and Child Health Bureau, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services,
HRSA. The NRC's primary mission is to promote health and safety
in out-of-home child care settings throughout the nation.
The standard resource for information concerning
this subject is the Caring
for Our Children: National Health and Safety Performance Standards
Guidelines for Out-of-Home Child Care Programs, Second Edition
published in January 2002. The guidelines were developed through
the collaborative efforts of the American
Public Health Association, the American
Academy of Pediatrics, and the Maternal
and Child Health Bureau. The entire text of this publication
is available on this website.
Each state manages licensure of child care settings
in different ways. The licensure
regulations from the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands
are also available on this Website. The NRC updates this database
as changes are made. |