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10,000 Bars, 2,000 Schools: Detrex and Rotary District 9212 Drive Handwashing Campaign to Curb Illness Among Learners

Hygiene

Pupils across 2,000 schools are expected to benefit from improved access to hygiene supplies after Detrex Antibacterial Soap donated 10,000 pieces of soap to Rotary District 9212 for distribution across Kenya. The initiative aims to strengthen handwashing practices in learning institutions, particularly in rural schools where access to basic hygiene tools remains limited.

The donation comes against the backdrop of persistent sanitation challenges in Kenya, where about 75 per cent of households lack handwashing facilities with soap and water, according to UNICEF. The gap highlights the critical role schools play as centres for promoting hygiene behaviour among children who often transfer these practices to their homes and communities.

Detrex said the soap donation will support handwashing stations installed by Rotary District 9212 in the beneficiary schools for at least one term. This will reinforce hygiene routines that public health experts say remain among the most cost-effective ways to prevent infectious diseases, including diarrhoeal and respiratory illnesses that contribute to school absenteeism.

Company officials described the initiative as part of a broader commitment to preventive health, noting that access to basic hygiene products remains inconsistent, particularly in lower-income communities where schools often serve as the most reliable point of access to water, sanitation and hygiene facilities.

“This partnership reflects our belief that health protection begins with simple daily habits such as handwashing. Together with Rotary, we are investing in the wellbeing of learners and in the health resilience of their families and communities,” said Rajul Malde, the Commercial Director of Pwani Oil Products Limited (Pwani Oil), which manufactures Detrex.

Rotary District 9212 will coordinate distribution through its education and community service networks, working with school administrations to ensure the soap reaches institutions where hygiene resources are most constrained.

Public health data shows that improving access to soap and water can significantly reduce preventable illness. Global evidence cited by UNICEF indicates that proper hygiene and sanitation interventions could help prevent hundreds of thousands of deaths among children under five each year, underlining the importance of sustained investment in hygiene infrastructure and supplies.

Education stakeholders say such private sector support has become increasingly important as schools continue to rebuild health safeguards established during the Covid-19 pandemic, when handwashing infrastructure expanded rapidly.

Rotary District 9212 said the partnership demonstrates how corporate and civic organisations can work together to close practical gaps that affect learning outcomes.

“Providing soap may appear simple, but it is one of the most effective interventions in protecting children’s health and dignity in schools. We are indeed grateful to Pwani Oil for supporting us with the tools needed to practise proper hygiene, ultimately making learning environments safer,” said Wairimu Njage, the Governor of Rotary District 9212, a regional division of Rotary International covering Kenya, Ethiopia, South Sudan and Eritrea.

The distribution exercise is expected to take place over the second academic term of 2026, with schools integrating the supplies into their daily hygiene routines as part of ongoing health education programmes.

Detrex said it expects the initiative to reach beyond schools, helping embed handwashing habits that extend into households, particularly in communities where access to soap remains limited.

Read Also: Detrex–Bomu Hospital Partnership Highlights Hygiene as First Line of Defence in Community Health

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