Welcome to Mommysavers Forums.
Go Back  

Chit-Chat Connect with other Mommysavers moms

Register FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Gallery iTrader

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes

Old 02-01-2008, 12:28 PM   #1
Jaw Drop Can you say ewe gross........
gourdlady06
Mommysavers Diva
 
gourdlady06's Avatar
 
Last Online: Yesterday 01:37 PM
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: So. Illinois
Real Name: Lori
Posts: 878
iTrader: (4)
Just got this email. Wow. I knew some of this stuff, but ewe....
If this doesn't make you a little ocd I don't know what will.

Here is the email:

The Germiest Places in America

WebMD Feature from "Health"

By Ginny Graves

OK, we admit it: We’re a little freaked out about germs these days. Since t he SARS scare several years ago, there’s been a steady stream of news reports about ugly bugs. West Nile virus! Microbes on our beaches! Drug-resistant bacteria! It’s enough to turn anybody into a germophobe. Here’s what you really need to know.

Germs are everywhere, and our map on pages 114 and 115 pinpoints just a few hot spots—from fast-food health-code violations (Orlando), rats in restaurants (Philadelphia), and infected food workers spreading Norovirus (Minnesota) to polluted beaches on the East Coast and nasty air in California. And talk about dirty water: In Texas, 348 of the state’s factories and utilities exceeded the amount of pollution allowed under their Clean Water Act. When it comes to antibiotic-resistant superbugs, Texas takes another hit. Community Acquired-Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) has emerged in epic proportions in Corpus Christi; that’s the same kind of bug that struck hospital nurseries in both Chicago and L.A. last year. For the most cases of Streptococcus pneumoniae, Florida is the winner (or loser, de pending upon how you look at it).

We call them the dirty dozen.
It’s our laundry list of the germiest places you’re likely to encounter during an average day. Sure, there are outbreaks of microbes and viruses across the country, but these buggers are where you live. In the office, at home, at the gym, on your vacation. “It’s enough to make even the least germophobic person a little worried,” says Dr. Germ, a.k.a. Charles Gerba, PhD, a professor of environmental microbiology at the University of Arizona. After all, some of these germs lurk where you least expect them, he says: “People are more worried about the trash can than the kitchen sink, when it should be the other way around.” Dr. Germ and a panel of other experts helped us identify the dirty dozen and devise ways for you to keep clean. After all, the fight is in your hands. Literally. Eighty percent of infections are spread through hand contact. So wash up, people, and get ready to wage a bit of germ warfare of your own.

1. Your kitchen sink
“Kitchen sinks are dirtier than most bathrooms,” says Kelly Reynolds, PhD, an environmental microbiologist at the University of Arizona. There are typically more than 500,000 bacteria per square inch in the drain. In fact, in a recent study, half of the top 10 germiest spots in the home were (gulp!) in the kitchen. That sponge you use to clean the counter? Crawling with bacteria, as are the sink’s basin and faucet handles.

Reduce the risk: “Clean your kitchen counters and sink with an antibacterial product after preparing or rinsing food, especially raw fruits and vegetables, which carry lots of potential pathogens like salmonella, campylobacter, and E. coli,” says Philip Tierno, PhD, author of The Secret Life

of Germs and director of clinical microbiology at New York University Medical Center. Sanitize sponges by running them through the dishwasher’s drying cycle. “That killed 99.9 percent of the bacteria on the sponges we used in a recent study—and we’d gotten them really good and contaminated first,” says Cheryl Mudd, a microbiologist with the Agricultural Research Service’s Food Safety Laboratory. As for the sink, clean it twice a week with a solution of one tablespoon of chlorine bleach and one quart of water. Scrub the basin, then pour the solution down the drain.

2. Airplane bathrooms
It’s not exactly a shock that there are a huge number of germs in most public bathrooms, but experts agree that those cramped and overused airplane loos (with only about one toilet for every 50 people) are the worst. “There are often traces of E. coli or fecal bacteria on the faucets and door handles, because it’s hard to wash your hands in those tiny sinks,” Gerba says. But here’s the worst news: The volcanic flush of the commode tends to spew particles into the air, coating the floor and walls with, well, whatever had been swirling around in there.

Reduce the risk: Toilet seats are surprisingly clean,but use the paper cover when available. After using the toilet, wash and dry your hands thoroughly, and use a paper towel to handle the toilet seat, lid, tap, and doorknob. Put the lid down before you flush. If there’s no lid, turn your back to the toilet while flushing and beat a hasty retreat.

3. A load of wet laundry
“Clean clothes” is a whopper of an oxymoron. “Anytime you transfer underwear from the washer to the dryer, you’re going to get E. coli on your hands,” Gerba says. Just one soiled undergarment can spread bacteria to the whole load and the machine.

Reduce the risk: Run your washer and dryer at 150 degrees, and wash whites with bleach (not the color-safe type; it doesn’t pack the same punch), which kills 99.99 percent of bugs. Transfer wet laundry to the dryer quickly so germs don’t multiply, wash underwear separately (there’s about a gram of feces—a quarter the size of a small peanut—in every pair of dirty underwear), and dry for at least 45 minutes. Wash your hands after laundering, and run a cycle of bleach and water between loads to eliminate any lingering bugs.

4. Public drinking fountains
Drinking fountains are bound to be germy, but school fountains are the biggest offenders, with anywhere from 62,000 to 2.7 million bacteria per square inch on the spigot, says Robert Donofrio, PhD, director of microbiology for NSF International. Other school hot spots: cafeteria trays, sink handles, desk-tops, and computer keyboards.

Yes, kids are germy creatures. And, thanks to their slapdash hygiene, 22 million school days are lost each year to colds alone.

Reduce the risk: Send your child to school with plenty of her own beverages. Teach her to wash her hands, especially before and after lunch, going to the bathroom, or using the computer. Send hand sanitizer to every school teacher and give extras to your child. And when it’s your turn to squeeze into that little desk for Open House? Swab it off with an antibacterial wipe, Gerba says. If schools did that every night, they’d reduce the child-absenteeism rate by half. And, of course, don’t drink from the water fountain!

5. Shopping cart handles
Saliva. Bacteria. Fecal matter. Those are just a few of the choice substances Gerba found on shopping cart handles. Carts rank high on the yuck scale because they’re handled by dozens of people every day and you’re “putting your broccoli where some kid’s butt was,” says the professor of environmental microbiology. And, of course, raw food carries nasty pathogens.

Reduce the risk: Many stores, aware of the ick factor, have a dispenser with disinfectant wipes near the carts. If yours doesn’t, bring your own and give the handle a quick swab; that’s been shown to kill nearly 100 percent of germs. Or carry along a cart cover, like the Grip-Guard or Healthy Handle, a dishwasher-safe polypropylene cover that fits over any size cart handle. At the meat counter, follow the lead of Elizabeth Scott, PhD, co-director of the Center for Hygiene and Health at Simmons College in Boston: “I always put raw meat in a plastic bag.

If I get some juice on my hands, I ask the person behind the counter for a disinfecting wipe.”

6. ATM buttons
If you’re not careful, you might pick up more than quick cash from your local ATM. Those buttons have more gunk on them than most public-bathroom doorknobs. (The same goes for vending-machine buttons, bus armrests, and escalator handrails.) After testing 38 ATMs in downtown Taipei, Chinese researchers recently found that each key contained, on average 1,200 germs. “ATMs aren’t frequently cleaned, and they are regularly touched—a perfect combination for a lot of germs,” environmental microbologist Kelly Reynolds, PhD, says.

Reduce the risk: “Carry an alcohol-based hand-sanitizer with you and rub it on your hands after a visit to the ATM,” Reynolds suggests. Also, be sure to do it after you handle money. “Paper money actually carries quite a few germs, too,” she says.

7. Your Marc Jacobs?
Dirty? Yep. Think petri dish. When University of Arizona professor of environmental microbiology Charles Gerba, PhD, and his team tested women’s purses not long ago, they found that most had tens of thousands of bacteria on the bottom and a few were overrun with millions. Another study found bugs like pseudomonas (which can cause eye infections), and skin-infection-causing staphylococcus bacteria, as well as salmonella and E. coli. Your makeup case is every bit as bad, as are your guy’s wallet and personal digital assistant.

Reduce the risk: Instead of slinging your bag on the floor, hang it on a hook whenever you can—especially in public bathrooms—and keep your bag off the kitchen counter. Stick with leather or vinyl purses, which are typically cleaner than cloth (less-porous surfaces are more impervious to germs). And wipe your bag down every few days with a mild soap or disinfectant, then let it air dry. Brand name, alas, makes no difference.

8. Playgrounds
There’s just no way to put this delicately: Children tend to ooze bodily fluids and then spread them around. “When we sampled playgrounds, we were pretty aghast at what we found—blood, mucus, saliva, urine,” Kelly Reynolds, PhD, says. Pair those findings with the fact that children put their fingers in their mouths and noses more than the rest of us, and it’s easy to understand why Junior (and maybe his mom or dad) has the sniffles.

Reduce the risk: Carry alcohol wipes or hand-sanitizing gel in your purse, and clean everybody’s hands a couple of times during a park visit, especially before snacking. Pick warm sunny days for outdoor play: “The sun’s ultraviolet light is actually a very effective disinfectant. Most bugs won’t survive long on surfaces that are hot and dry,” says Howard Backer, MD, MPH, an expert in communicable diseases in Richmond, California.

9. Mats and machines at health clubs
“I see a yoga mat, and I worry,” says Elizabeth Scott, PhD, who has found antibiotic-resistant staphylococcus on yoga mats and cardio and resistance machines. “At high schools, antibiotic-resistant-staph infections have been transmitted through wrestling mats. The same thing could happen at health clubs.”

Reduce the risk: Wipe down machines with antibacterial wipes before working out. Bring your own yoga mat or cover a loaner with your towel. “Shower after a workout and soap up your skin to rinse off any bacteria you may have been exposed to,” Scott says. “Thorough washing gets rid of antibiotic-resistant staph.”

10. Your bathtub
Shocking, but true: The place you go to get clean is quite dirty. In a recent study, Elizabeth Scott, PhD, found staphylococcus bacteria, a common cause of serious skin infections, in 26 percent of the tubs she tested, as compared with just 6 percent of garbage cans. Tubs typically had more than 100,000 bacteria per square inch! “It makes sense when you think about it,” she says. “You’re washing germs and viruses off your body. The tub is a fairly moist environment, so bacteria can grow.”

Reduce the risk: Once a week, apply a disinfecting cleaner to the tub. “You need to actually scrub, then you need to wash the germs down the drain with water and dry the tub with a clean towel. If you leave the tub wet, germs are more likely to survive,” Scott says. Pay special attention to soap scum—a surprisingly germ-friendly environment, author Phiilp Tierno, PhD, adds. If someone who uses the tub has a skin infection, scrub it afterward with a solution of two tablespoons bleach in one quart of water.

11. Your office phone
This is enough to make you dial 911: Office phones often have more than 25,000 germs per square inch, and your desk, computer keyboard, and mouse aren’t far behind. “Phones, including cell phones, can be pretty gross; they get coated with germs from your mouth and hands,” says Robert Donofrio, PhD. Although we’d like to think of ourselves as cleaner than guys, women’s offices have twice the number of bacteria (but men’s are slightly more likely to harbor antibiotic-resistant staphyloccus). In fact, Gerba calls desks “bacteria cafeterias,” because of all the food particles he found there. Most common office areas—kitchens, copiers—are not as dirty as individual desks, although the microwave is pretty bad.

Reduce the risk: Simply cleaning your desk, phone, and key-board with a disinfecting wipe once in the middle of the day will kill 99.99 percent of the bacteria and viruses.

12. Hotel Room Remote
What’s the first thing you do when you settle in at a hotel? You grab the remote control and switch on the TV—you, and the hundreds of other guests who’ve stayed there. How dirty is it? Owen Hendley, MD, a professor of pediatrics and infectious disease at the University of Virginia School of Medicine, and his colleagues recently tested various surfaces for the cold virus after a group of sick people had stayed overnight. “We found the virus on the remote, door handles, light switches, pens, and faucet handles,” he says.

Reduce the risk: Clean the remote control, phone, clock radio, door handles, and light switches with germicidal wipes. While you’re at it, throw on a pair of slippers and throw off the bedspread. “We’ve found urine and semen on both carpets and bedspreads.” They may not make you truly sick, but it certainly is enough to make you feel queasy.



Originally published on November 1, 2007



RELATED LINKS

Think Your House Is Clean? Think Again
Is Your Kitchen Safe?
Don’t Worry so Much About Scary Diseases
Safer Alternatives for Bathroom Cleaning email:
gourdlady06 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-01-2008, 01:09 PM   #2
Default
SAHMto3boys
Mommysavers Goddess
 
SAHMto3boys's Avatar
 
Last Online: Yesterday 10:19 PM
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 1,058
iTrader: (0)
Wow, I ususally don't think much about germs... I wash my hands frequently, etc. But EW!!! I might start carrying around little antibacterial wipes! Wow, the shopping cart handle... I never think about that one. Clean (but wet) laundry. Oh, and now I want to go SCRUB my bathtubs, shower & kitchen sink!

Oh, and the poor kiddos desks! If I were a teacher and read this I might start wiping down the kids desks every afternoon - and put the disinfectant by the door when the come in for recess. I wish a school would do some sort of experiament. Have 1 teacher do that and she if she has less absenses than the classroom next door! Of course there would be MANY factors that could contribute, but interesting anyway.

Wow, I think I may be turning into a germophobe.
__________________
Stay at home mom to my 3 boys... ages 5, 3 & 1!

I can do all things through CHRIST who strengthens me. Philippians 4:13
SAHMto3boys is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-01-2008, 01:19 PM   #3
Default
LJGZsmom
Mommysavers Goddess
 
LJGZsmom's Avatar
 
Last Online: 04-25-2008 06:41 AM
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Kansas
Real Name: Jenifer
Posts: 1,478
iTrader: (0)
YUCK!!!!!! The one that got me was the washing machine! I never thought about that. Another one not mentioned that grosses us out is chairs at resturants and such. Just think of all of the kids in diapers and pull ups that might have "leaked" through and onto the seats. Gross!! When our kids were smaller and we carried a diaper bag, hubby took a baby wipe and washed down each seat. Now he always says he wishes we still had baby wipes!
__________________
Jenifer
Proud wife to one amazing man
Proud mom to four awesome kids


April showers bring May flowers
"Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him and He will make your path straight." Proverbs 3:5-6
LJGZsmom is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-01-2008, 02:32 PM   #4
Default
LeeMP22
super-duper cyber shopper
 
LeeMP22's Avatar
 
Last Online: Today 06:45 AM
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Long Island, NY
Real Name: Lisa
Posts: 3,661
iTrader: (11)
I knew about the shopping cart handle, but I never really thought about the seat that I put my raw veggies in. They're in bags, but still eeeewww!
__________________

come visit me in Grocery Bargains- click here: http://mommysavers.com/boards/grocery-bargains/ it rocks!

LeeMP22 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 02-03-2008, 11:00 AM   #5
Default
jessthenurse
Rockin' Scrap Mod
 
jessthenurse's Avatar
 
Last Online: Today 06:27 AM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Kokomo, IN
Real Name: Jessika
Posts: 5,502
iTrader: (19)
Ok, yes, carry around those antibacterial/antimicrobial wipes to wipe down shopping cart handles/restaurant tables/etc. But, I think the biggest thing contributing to the amount of germs are those little bottles of hand sanitizer every kid is now required (at least where I live) to take to school. If we'd quit bathing our kids in this stuff and just make them wash their hands with good old soap and water (and no the soap doesn't need to be antibacterial/antimiccobial) we'd all be alot healthier.

On that note, the nursing home I work at just had our annual inspection from the Board of Health and we got "tagged" for someone using hand sanitizer instead of washing w/soap and water.

WASH YOUR HANDS!!! It is the SINGLE most important and most effective way to prevent the spread of germs!!!

*stepping off my soapbox now*
__________________
Come check out our scrapbooking deals!


myspace.com/jessthenurse1980
jessthenurse is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-03-2008, 11:20 AM   #6
Default
Country~mouse
Mommysavers Goddess
 
Country~mouse's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Wisconsin
Real Name: Tanya
Posts: 3,419
iTrader: (0)
Thanks, now i have to go scrub my whole body with bleach.LOL
__________________
"Go on, get outside, get the stink blown off ya!!"
Country~mouse is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-03-2008, 12:10 PM   #7
Default
Jodie
Mommysavers Goddess
 
Jodie's Avatar
 
Last Online: Yesterday 11:11 PM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: California
Posts: 4,367
iTrader: (1)
I was pretty shocked about the laundry.

Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww!!!!!!

I feel sick.
__________________
Jodie....Wife to Andrew (1995)
Mommy to Riley (2000) and Wyatt (2003)
Photobucket
Jodie is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-03-2008, 03:21 PM   #8
Default
jen4
Mommysavers Diva + Approved Trader
 
jen4's Avatar
 
Last Online: Yesterday 07:46 PM
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Alabama
Posts: 899
iTrader: (5)
Quote:
Originally Posted by Country~mouse
Thanks, now i have to go scrub my whole body with bleach.LOL

I was thinking exactly the same thing.....now I'm paranoid about
touching anything!!
__________________
Jen
jen4 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-03-2008, 04:19 PM   #9
Default
nataliesmom
Senior Mommysavers Member
 
nataliesmom's Avatar
 
Last Online: Yesterday 09:54 PM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 250
iTrader: (0)
YUCK!!!!!
__________________
Sarah Joy
nataliesmom is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2008, 12:03 AM   #10
Default
dancemom3
Senior Mommysavers Member
 
Last Online: 04-01-2008 01:40 AM
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 151
iTrader: (0)
Blech!!!!
__________________
~~Shawn~~ Wife to John 7/6/95~~Mommy to Sydney, Jordan and Brooklyn~~
dancemom3 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off

Members
 

Sponsors

 


Advertisement

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:46 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0