Monday, November 28, 2011

Seniors and Boomers: Fight Flu Season with Hand Sanitizers

Even though the holidays are upon us....don't forget the basics! Be Prepared! January promotional events are around the corner. During the holidays, a hand sanitizer for the car, desk drawer or purse will be much appreciated!

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the single most important thing we can do to keep from getting sick and spreading illness to others is to wash our hands. Hand Sanitizers play a vital role each winter in keeping seniors and boomers healthy.

According to the American Journal Of Nursing: "Each year in U.S. hospitals there are approximately 1.7 million health care-associated infections and nearly 100,000 associated deaths."

Hand Sanitizers are a perfect way to promote your brand!
Your logo, contact information and promotional message will be seen on a daily basis. Repetition & constant visability are solid cornerstones for reinforcing your message.

Why Hand Sanitizers?
Sanitizers are exceptionally useful. Recipients appreciate being given a hand sanitzer. Pocket-size sanitizers are portable & extremely convenient for the user. Providing hand sanitizers to business associates, clients and prospects highlights concern for health!

ConnectTheDotsAdvertising offers many varieties of hand sanitizers:
Gel & Spray Sanitizers, Carabiners, Towelettes.

SPECIAL:
1 oz Gel BottleFour Color Label:.74 cents
1 oz Gel BottleOne color Label.64 cents
http://www.connectthedotsadvertising.com


866-977-7792
ConnectTheDotsAdvertising/Kaeser & Blair
RL Nadler & Associates
Memorable Promotional Advertising for Boomers and Seniors!

Information For Healthcare providers from the American Journal of Nursing:
"It has long been known that hand hygiene among health care workers plays a central role in preventing the transmission of infectious agents. But despite a Joint Commission requirement that Centers for Disease Control and Prevention hand hygiene guidelines be implemented in hospitals, compliance among health care workers remains low. The authors argue that hospitals may best improve compliance by assessing the barriers to it, measuring the rates of compliance, educating staff on the importance of hand hygiene, making sanitizing products more available for staff use, and holding staff accountable. The authors emphasize as well that lasting improvement in hand hygiene is a collaborative effort that depends on the committed support of hospital administrators"

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