Saturday, July 11, 2015

Germs and Your Bathroom

Germs and Your Bathroom

While bathrooms are not as populated with germs as kitchens, they still harbor their share of illness-causing bacteria lurking everywhere from the sink faucet to the towels.
But changing some habits and doing spring cleaning around the calendar can help make your bathroom about as sterile as an operating room

Some tips to stop germs in the bathroom:

Color code hand and bath towels. 
"This way everyone has their one color so family members don't swap towels and viruses, " says Neil Schachter, MD, medical director of respiratory care at Mount Sinai in New York City, and the author of The Good Doctor's Guide to Cold  and Flu. "If people are burrowing their faces in towels, they are doing more than drying off, they are depositing germs." If you don't want to color-code, use a waterproof magic marker on white towels, so every family member knows which one is theirs, he suggests.


Don't share toothbrush.
Make sure everyone has their toothbrush covered by a Toothbrush Shield. Germs can be passed along by your toothbrush touching another toothbrush in the same!e holder.  Replace your toothbrush regularly after you've had any illness such as a cold or  flu because germs can remain even after you've recovered. Here's why: When you brush, you remove plaque and particles so toothbrushes can become contaminated with bacteria, blood, saliva, and oral debris. This contamination can be passed right back to you.


Always flush with the lid down.
According to Charles Gerba, PhD, a professor of microbiology at University of Arizona in Tucson, flushing the toilet with the lid up is not wise. "Polluted water vapor erupts out of the flushing toilet bowl and it can take several hours for these particles to finally settle -- not to mention where," he says. "If you have your toothbrush too close to the toilet, and it is not covered, you are brushing your teeth with what's in your toilet."


Wipe down high-touch surfaces.
Use disinfectant spray or wipes on faucets, toilet flushers, cupboard handles, doorknobs, shower door handles, and any other area that you touch with your hands, Schachter says. "These sprays or wipes kill germs on contact." The rhinoviruses that cause colds can survive up to three hours, so cleaning surfaces with disinfectant may help stop infections, according to the National Institutes of Health. "Don't forget the toilet brush handle and plunger handle," adds Paul Horowitz, MD, the medical director of Pediatric Clinics at Legacy Health System in Portland, Ore. "These are high-touch areas that we don't think about, let alone clean."




3 comments:

  1. These are all awesome facts and advise about bathroom germs! I am a clean freak, and the bathroom is up there with kitchen as something that I clean multiple times a day. My husband still thinks I'm crazy because I'm always telling him that he has to close the lid when he flushes! Ew!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow....I have been doing so many things wrong! I truly thought a toothbrush cover was right! Thanks for sharing!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Sometimes I wonder how we survive!

    ReplyDelete