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The 10 Most Germ-Infested Places in the Public

Lewis

Member
If you've used an elevator, shared a pen or grabbed a snack from a vending machine today, more than likely you've already come into contact with illness-causing germs. In fact, some of the dirtiest places in public are seemingly innocent, yet because they're used often and rarely cleaned, they harbor a host of potential pathogens.

According to researchers at the University of Arizona, who tested over 800 public surfaces in four U.S. cities, one out of every five surfaces in places like shopping centers, offices, day care centers and airports are contaminated.
Bodily Fluids, Fecal Matter and Protein
Along with testing the samples for the presence of protein (which is a general indicator of hygiene) and fecal matter, the researchers measured levels of three biochemical markers that could contain illness-causing substances. These included:

  • Hemoglobin: Indicates the presence of blood
  • Alpha-amylase: Indicates the presence of mucus, saliva and/or urine
  • Urea: Indicates the presence of urine
Out of all the samples, the places that carried the most germs were children's playgrounds. A full 44 percent of playground surfaces tested positive for bodily fluids.
"Really, I'm never going to go on a swing in a children's playground again," said microbiologist Chuck Gerba, one of the study's researchers.
The Top 10 Germiest Public Places
Playgrounds are not the only public places that call for a good hand-washing after using them. Following are the top 10 germiest places the researchers found (germs are able to survive on these surfaces anywhere from just a few hours to a few weeks).

  1. Playgrounds
  2. Bus rails/armrests
  3. Public bathrooms
  4. Shopping cart handles
  5. Escalator handrails
  6. Chair armrests
  7. Vending machine buttons
  8. Shared pens
  9. Public telephones
  10. Elevator buttons
Germs Easily Transferred Onto Personal Items and Into Homes
After finding the dirtiest places, the researchers set out to find how easily germs are transferred from one spot to another. They artificially contaminated surfaces with an invisible fluorescent dye then tracked the dye's path over the course of several hours.
People commonly picked up the fake "germs" from doorknobs, telephones and other surfaces, and they spread quickly to people's faces, hair, desktops, pens, computer keyboards and other personal items.
From there, the germs spread to people's cars and into their homes, ending up on kitchen appliances, faucets and remote controls.
"The houses lit up like Christmas trees," said Dr. Kelly Reynolds, the study's lead author.
How to Keep as Germ-Free as Possible
Considering that Americans touch about 300 different surfaces every 30 minutes, it's pretty much impossible to avoid all germs. However, there are ways to dramatically reduce your risk of spreading, and getting sick from, these pesky invaders.
First and foremost, wash your hands often. This means before you eat and prepare food, after you come home from the office, the supermarket or just about any public place and, of course, after using the restroom.
"The best defense in the world is hand-washing, which people get tired of doing," Gerba said.
The researchers also recommended routinely disinfecting frequently touched surfaces both at home and in the office. Wiping down appliance handles, computer keyboards, doorknobs, light switches, etc., is an excellent way to help reduce the spread of disease, and we highly recommend the PerfectClean OfficePure Pack for doing so.
Unlike ordinary cleaning rags that simply push dirt around, PerfectClean's revolutionary ultramicrofiber construction enables them to reach deep into microscopic crevices (NO other cleaning tool available even comes close!) and remove everything in their path, including biological contaminants too small to see with the naked eye. Even better, the terry cloths that come in the PerfectClean OfficePure Pack are ideal to carry with you, and can be used without cleaning agents or even water, and are still incredibly effective.
So remember, while germs are all around us no matte how "clean" we are, you can go a long way toward keeping yourself and your family safe from germs by washing your hands and wiping down commonly touched surfaces regularly.
Recommended Reading
The Five Key Areas of Illness-Causing Germs & Toxins in Your Home
Just How Germ-Infested are the Hotel Rooms You Stay In? What are the Risks?
The 10 Most Germ-Infested Places in Public
 
You mean to tell me there is no comments on this stuff for you or your family, when you all put your hands on shopping carts. And yesterday a completed report that I saw on the news, said that feces was found on mostly every shopping cart that they tested. And that we should use sterile wipes to wipe off the handles on the carts first. Which I will do from now on. I can't believe none of you guy's said anything about this very important stuff.
 
Live with it, Lewis. There's feces everywhere! :yes :lol

The best line of defense IMO is not only hand washing, but a healthy immune system. As the saying goes "It take two to tango" likewise, "It take both a germ and weak body to catch something".

Sometimes germs hit us in a greater quantity than the body can handle and catching something is inevitable. But in the concentrations you are talking about, it is not a problem with a healthy body.

I gauge my health by how many colds I catch a year (which ranges less than one and not severe at that mostly). Now compare that to the "average" person (I believe it's 2-3) and actually there's still a greater risk there --- as opposed to diseases by fecal matter. So if a cold is far more likely to be caught, I'm certainly not going to worry about the lesser stuff.
 
Hi Lewis,
I agree with you still there are few I want to add here.
Mart's doors handles,
ATM machine buttons,
Petrol pumps.
I have skipped few from my mind which I will post later.
 
Live with it, Lewis. There's feces everywhere! :yes :lol

The best line of defense IMO is not only hand washing, but a healthy immune system. As the saying goes "It take two to tango" likewise, "It take both a germ and weak body to catch something".

Sometimes germs hit us in a greater quantity than the body can handle and catching something is inevitable. But in the concentrations you are talking about, it is not a problem with a healthy body.

I gauge my health by how many colds I catch a year (which ranges less than one and not severe at that mostly). Now compare that to the "average" person (I believe it's 2-3) and actually there's still a greater risk there --- as opposed to diseases by fecal matter. So if a cold is far more likely to be caught, I'm certainly not going to worry about the lesser stuff.

Totally agree!

I was married (for a SHORT time) to a lady who was a germ-o-phobe. I could NOT get it thru her head that we have this thing called "an immune system".

She once told me that she could NOT understand why I wasn't dead.

I told her I could not understand why she didn't not acknowledge the immune system.
 
My biggest problem with ‘restrooms’ is actually not the toilet seat as we have a sanitizing foam in the cubicles that you can use to clean the surface before you sit down.

It’s the taps that really irk me. I am completely grossed out to think what the previous 50 hands touched before they touched the tap. :verysick
 
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