Does soap need time to work.

Cecil was strangely dismissive in this column. Soap does need 15 to 20 seconds to work. The skin on your hands is no different than someone’ssmelly armpits or crotch. A lot of bacteria grows in those areas. Thats why it stinks.

Singing Happy Birthday or the ABC song is a classic way to teach impatient kids to thoroughly brush their teeth and wash up.

http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1196/does-soap-need-time-to-work

Also people that don’t shave have hairy pits and crotches. Takes more careful washing to get the body oils and stink out of the hair.

Wow. That’s what I call thorough.

I don’t even want to think about the nicks and scratches.

Cecil did say that "the time you spend soaping and scrubbing is more than sufficient for soap to do its thing without your having to wait additional time. " The question was whether, after applying the soap, you should just let it sit there. That’s different from the amount of time spent scrubbing. The “Happy Birthday” routine is to be actively scrubbing for that time, not just to have the soap on your hands and do nothing.

We now say to spend more time scrubbing than they did in 1995 (date of the column) but that doesn’t invalidate Cecil’s answer. The soap sitting there on your skin all by itself ain’t gonna accomplish nothin’ without some washing motion.

Thats a good point. You have to scrub for soap to work. Some people exfoliate with a loofah. I usually don’t.

Soap doesn’t magically do anything just sitting on the skin.

Ok, but what if you have eczema or sensitive skin?
(A: Manage the tradeoffs. Use moisturizer after each washing. Steroid ointments as appropriate. Consider hand sanitizers with some sort of oils built in. Support research on the condition.)

Then you want to rinse the soap off as thoroughly as possible (or use something other than soap). Usually a water softener is the best solution — so to speak — along with the other things you mentioned. Prior to the '80s, many municipal suppliers softened their water. Those days would appear to be long gone.

In fact, sometimes what appears to be a chronic skin condition is just contact dermatitis resulting from harsh soap and hard water. In that case, greasy moisturizers and topical steroids can actually make things worse.