Hands off

Hands off
Getty Images

It’s no secret that public places are often not the cleanest. But that doesn’t mean that getting sick, or even interacting with gross, dirty things, every time you’re out and about is an inevitability. Data collected by real studies has revealed the items in many common places that are the germiest – and they’re often different from what you might expect. So here are the spots to avoid (or clean thoroughly!) on your next outing to a restaurant, grocery store, and ten other places you probably frequent.

Restaurants

Restaurants
Shutterstock

Microbiologist, Dr Philip Tierno teamed up in 2012 to investigate some of the germiest surfaces in restaurants. The absolute filthiest spot: chairs, 70 per cent of which contained bad bacteria. Chairs are constantly coming in contact with new customers, but restaurants aren’t necessarily disinfecting them too often. Menus and lemon wedges also proved some of the top offenders – employees don’t always do a thorough job cleaning menus or use gloves when handling lemons, pointed out microbiologist ‘Dr Germ’, Charles Gerba. You can’t avoid germs entirely, but you can wash your hands before dinner or toss the lemon peel aside after squeezing instead of dropping it in your water.

Here are some red flags you’re about to eat at a bad restaurant.

Offices

Offices
Shutterstock

Entrepreneur sent swabs of various surfaces around its office to Dr Gerba and found that phones were the dirtiest of them all. Not only did they contain an average of more than 25,000 bacteria units each, but they also contained 60 types of bacteria. Desks weren’t too much better, carrying about 21,000 bacteria units each.

Supermarkets

Supermarkets
shutterstock

Beware the frozen food aisle. Traditional supermarkets’ refrigerator doors carry a hefty 327,000 colony-forming units (CFU) per square inch – about 18 times more than a pet toy, and four and a half times more than a shopping cart. Taking all types of grocery stores into account (traditional, budget, superstore and upscale), fruits and veggies were even worse in certain stores, with 5,700,000 CFU and 3,300,000 CFU per square inch at budget and upscale markets, respectively – though just a fraction of those on the produce in traditional grocers or superstores. “Ditch supermarket germs as soon as you get home by washing your hands or using hand sanitiser,” says Gerba.

Do you fall for these supermarket tricks? Find out here.

Airports

Airports
Getty Images

It’d be pretty tough to avoid the germiest spot in airports. Researchers swabbed surfaces around an airport, including toilets and handrails, and found that those trays in the security line are most likely to make you sick. (Technically, a plastic toy dog in a children’s play area had more germs – two out of three samples – but passengers are less likely to come in contact with that.) Half the trays had evidence of viruses, including ones that cause the flu and colds. The researchers point out that practically all passengers touch those trays, and they tend to use their entire hand, meaning more potential germs could come in contact. The authors say their results should encourage airports to put hand sanitiser at the beginning and end of security lines, but you can always take matters into your own hands by packing your own.

Next time you travel pack these items in your carry-on luggage, they could save your life.

Aeroplanes

Aeroplanes
Shutterstock

Those fold-down tray tables on planes get a lot of media attention, but one experiment showed there are even germier spots. Investigators from Canadian consumer watchdog program Marketplace swabbed five often-touched areas on 18 different flights, and they found that the seat headrest actually had the highest concentration of bacteria – and some even had E. coli. “It really is about ingestion or inhalation,” microbiologist Jason Tetro commented. “There’s a very good likelihood that you could potentially be inhaling this or getting it into close enough contact that it could get into you.” The second dirtiest spot was the seat pocket, which might not be so surprising when you consider the fact that flight attendants have found everything from dirty nappies to uneaten food tucked inside them. Tetro recommends carrying hand sanitiser and wet wipes to disinfect before hunkering down for a flight.

Doctor’s offices

Doctor’s offices
Shutterstock

Sterile as they seem, there are still germs lurking in your doctor’s office – and it’s not in the waiting room. Insurancequotes.com put several doctor’s office items to the test and found that clipboard pens hang onto a staggering eight million CFU per square inch – more than 46,000 times more than what you’d find on a toilet seat.

Read on to find out how to make the most of your doctor’s appointment.

Dentist offices

Dentist offices
Shutterstock

Thankfully, tools and equipment like examination lights have the lowest numbers of bacteria, according to a study led by Dr Gerba. But the worst offenders were armrests on patient chairs and office phones. The study did have a silver lining: Wiping the surfaces down with disinfecting wipes was an effective way to cut down the germs.

Your own home

Your own home
Getty Images

The dirtiest place in your home (and most public places) actually isn’t in the bathroom – it’s in the kitchen. Public health and safety organisation NSF swabbed 30 items in 22 families’ homes and found that 77 per cent of sponges and rags contained coliform, a type of bacteria that includes Salmonella and E. coli. Pretty gross for something that you use to get germs off your dirty dishes. To make matters worse, a separate study found that even trusted methods of cleaning a sponge, like nuking it in the microwave, weren’t actually that effective against bacteria. The study researchers recommend replacing your sponge every week to avoid spreading germs.

Here are the best kitchen and dining room cleaning hacks.

Bathrooms

Bathrooms
Getty Images

Surprisingly, the worst offender isn’t the toilet, in the bathroom in your own home, at least. With 27 per cent harbouring coliform, the toothbrush holder is the place teeming with the most germs, according to the NSF study. Meanwhile, only five per cent of toilet seats and no toilet handles carried that bacteria.

Hotels

Hotels
Shutterstock

Hotel rooms may look spic and span, but there’s a difference between tidy and disinfected. Unfortunately, most hotel rooms are full of things the hotels aren’t cleaning as they should. The worst offender? The light switch – which isn’t a spot housekeeping is likely to wipe down – is home to 112.7 CFU, almost all of which were faecal bacteria, according to a report presented at the 2012 General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. TV remotes were also pretty germy, harbouring about 68 CFU, but a separate investigation microbiologist, Dr Luisa Ikner, conducted found that the remote was the main spot for germs to lurk. Can’t hurt to wipe both down with disinfectant wipes after you check in.

These are spots to never, ever skip when spring cleaning.

Your car

Your car
Shutterstock

British car retailer Motorpoint took swabs of 20 spots in a ‘typical’ car (the owner had dogs and typically ate in his car) and found that the highest concentration of bacteria was in the back of the car, possibly because that’s where the dogs would sit when riding around. The area where the driver’s feet would go was teeming with bacteria, too, along with the seat belt buttons and handbrakes. You probably aren’t as diligent about giving your car interior a deep clean as you are with your house, but it’s worth disinfecting those high-contact surfaces every once in a while.

Elementary schools

Elementary schools
Shutterstock

Parents, take note: you’ll want to watch how your kid drinks from the water fountain. An NSF study of two primary schools found that classroom water fountain spigots were the most bacteria-infested spots, carrying 2.7 million CFU per square inch. Cleaning and disinfecting brand, Lysol recommends telling your kids not to put their mouths right against the spigot (of course) and to let the water run for a couple of seconds before taking a sip.

Sign up here to get Reader’s Digest’s favourite stories straight to your inbox!

Source: RD.com

Never miss a deal again - sign up now!

Connect with us: