How To

How to Make a NATURAL Antibacterial Hand Sanitizer Using Aromatherapy

By Shirley Philbrick

SPhilbrick products SPhilbrick products

Rate: (7 Ratings)

Concerned about resistant bacteria to hand sanitizers that are currently on the market? Try this natural aromatherapy based recipe.

Instructions

Difficulty: Easy

Things You’ll Need:

Step1
Choose a container of your choice. This recipe will work in plastic squeeze bottles, or mini spray bottles. Look for these in the travel accessories area of health and beauty departments.
Step2
Use the following recipe: 2 parts aloe gel (NOT juice). 1 part distilled water (NOT tap). 1 part grain alcohol-vodka (NOT isopropyl). 4-5 drops essential oil of choice (NOT fragrance oils)
Step3
Mix all ingredients in glass bowl (preferably) with a plastic spoon. I don't use metal dishes or utensils because of potential reactions with the ingredients. Pour into plastic containers. You can add less water if you prefer a thicker product.

Tips & Warnings

  • Essential oils are nearly all anti-microbial. I use tea tree and lemon for the hand sanitizer recipe that I market in my massage office. When using both, add 4 drops each or to your own preference. Oils can be found in any natural foods store.
  • Aloe gel is used as a thickening agent and moisturizer. It is found in natural food stores. Grain alcohol is a sanitizer without the smell of isopropyl alcohol. Found anywhere; hint: don't spring for the expensive stuff ! Distilled water will allow a more clear product without the mineral content of other types. Found in the grocery store.
  • Lavender oil is also a good choice to blend with tea tree.
  • This is a safe, effective product that I market in my massage practice. I believe the chemical constituents in store sanitizers is allowing microbes to become more resistant. Essential oils, to date, have not been shown to allow this to happen. As with all products, keep out of reach of children.

Comments

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2besure

2besure said

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on 8/27/2008 Wow, this is so simple. And I have and aloe plant. Will try this.

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on 5/8/2008 Hi Christianmom, not a silly question at all ! A "part" is a generic term. An example would be: 1 teaspoon of one ingredient to 2 teaspoons of a second. I use the term "part" because depending on the container you use, different amounts are required. Hope this answers your question, but if not, email me and I can give you a very specific recipe to follow !

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on 5/5/2008 Ok, this may sound silly, but what is 1 part and 2 part (how much of each item is that???)

Boreas

Boreas said

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on 3/7/2008 That is a great idea with all essential oils being anti-bacterial. I new it for eucalyptus but this is the first time I thought about it for all oils...

Speedy-Max

Speedy-Max said

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on 3/2/2008 Good idea, thanks

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eHow Article: How to Make a NATURAL Antibacterial Hand Sanitizer Using Aromatherapy

Article By: Shirley Philbrick

Shirley Philbrick

Authority Authority | 12920 Points

Category: Health

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