Well, technically the kind that has ethyl alcohol such as germ-x can get you drunk but the other chemicals in it might get you pretty sick. Licking, or even applying hand sanitizer to your hands, can cause a person to fail a urine alcohol test. The same is true of mouthwash and any other product that contains alcohol. This is a serious problem that reduces the validity of urine test results, according to the US federal government.
Using hand sanitizer should not cause a positive result on an alcohol test, as hand sanitizers typically contain isopropyl alcohol or ethanol in concentrations that are not high enough to register on a breathalyzer or blood test for alcohol consumption.
If it is an ETG test, they are so delicate that they detect hand sanitizer. Fact. It also detects other household alcohols such as bleach and cleaning solutions. I'm sure it would pick up a sip of wine.
No, and if you're being tested for ETG you can damage your case even more - there's alcohol in hand sanitizer.
A spot the size of a dime is enough but you can use as much as you want. However, don't take a urine alcohol test afterward because you risk receiving a false positive result for alcoholic beverage consumption.
2 min. I did an experiment in 6th grade to test that question.
A urine test for alcohol can detect alcohol if the person used mouthwash containing alcohol, ate any food containing alcohol, inhaled alcohol, used a hand sanitizer containing alcohol, had an injection site sterilized with alcohol, used alcohol on an injury, etc.
Hand sanitizer can leave a residue or temporary mark, especially on certain surfaces or materials like leather or unfinished wood. To avoid potential staining, it's best to test on a small, inconspicuous area first. Promptly wiping off excess hand sanitizer can also help prevent any staining.
A test kit
Test strips for common sanitizers can be purchased from restaurant and cleaning supply houses. Most health departments in the United States require the proper test strips be kept on hand to test sanitizer strength and effectiveness.
Not directly. It might cause "spotting" - small amounts of blood from inside the womb that sometimes appears between periods and this might contaminate a urine sample (i.e. a false positive for haematuria - blood in the urine). A properly conducted mid-stream urine test should prevent contamination of the urine by uterine blood.
maybe, if you stand on your right hand and pick your nose with your foot