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Survey finds airport restroom users seldom wash
Sun Times ^
| 09/16/03
| JIM RITTER
Posted on 09/16/2003 6:42:02 AM PDT by bedolido
More than one of four users of O'Hare Airport washrooms didn't wash their hands after going to the bathroom, according to a survey that found even dirtier hands in New York's airport.
But in Toronto, 96 percent of airport bathroom users washed up. The high rate likely is due to fears over the SARS virus, which hit the Canadian city hard, researchers said.
Observers who hung out in airport bathrooms spied on 7,541 users in six cities. Observers were instructed to comb their hair and put on makeup while discreetly recording hand-washing behavior.
The percentage of non-washers was 29 percent in New York, 26 percent in Chicago, San Francisco and Miami and 19 percent in Dallas.
"The same people that fail to wash after using restrooms go on to pick up children, handle food, greet family and use other public facilities," said Dr. Judy Daly, secretary of the American Society for Microbiology, which sponsored the survey.
The survey, conducted last month by Wirthlin Worldwide, was reported at the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy at McCormick Place.
The findings indicate many people lie when it comes to hand-washing. In an earlier survey, 95 percent of adults claimed they always wash their hands after using public restrooms.
With the exception of Toronto, there has been no significant increase in hand-washing compared with observational studies in 1996 and 2000. And researchers fear rates could drop in Toronto as SARS fears ebb. During the epidemic's peak, the media bombarded residents with reminders to wash their hands.
Germs enter your body if your unwashed hands touch your nose, mouth, eyes and open wounds. Hand-washing is one of the simplest and most effective ways to reduce the transmission of colds, flu, diarrhea, SARS and other diseases.
Health officials advise washing before preparing or eating food, treating a wound or a sick person and inserting or removing contact lenses. Wash after going to the bathroom; handling uncooked meat, poultry and fish; changing a diaper; blowing your nose; coughing; sneezing; taking out the garbage, or handling an animal.
Use soap and warm running water. Rub hands together for at least 10 to 15 seconds. Wash all surfaces thoroughly, including wrists and under the fingernails. Forget anti-bacterial soap; ordinary soap works just fine.
Some aren't keeping it clean
A survey found the following percentages of people do not wash their hands after using airport restrooms:
Dallas/Fort Worth: males, 31 percent; females, 8 percent
John F. Kennedy, New York: males, 37 percent; females, 22 percent
Miami Dade County: males, 30 percent; females, 21 percent
O'Hare: males, 38 percent; females, 15 percent
San Francisco: males, 20 percent; females, 41 percent
Toronto: males, 5 percent; females, 3 percent
Total: males, 26 percent, females, 17 percent
SOURCE: American Society for Microbiology
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: airport; restroom; sars; survey; users; wash
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To: TontoKowalski
the WalMart restroom I was in last week. It looked like someone had crapped on the wall.
I recently learned something from a plumber out here in the SoCal desert.....it's a cultural sort of thing that Latinos often use the paper, but don't flush it - it's either tossed on the floor of a public bathroom, or in a home, there's a box for it...but it's NOT flushed. Maybe back home, it saved digging another pit or something.
Wifey noticed that the stall at Hometown Buffet has a sign inside the door requesting "deposit soiled toilet paper in the commode".
21
posted on
09/16/2003 7:01:13 AM PDT
by
ErnBatavia
(Why do the Flag postage stamps peel off upside down..infiltrators?)
To: Registered
No offence man, but I would have called you a damn "do-gooder", and barged right past you.
:)
22
posted on
09/16/2003 7:01:13 AM PDT
by
CygnusXI
(Where's that dang Meteor already?)
To: TontoKowalski; bedolido
this thread is hilarious!!
23
posted on
09/16/2003 7:01:55 AM PDT
by
xsmommy
To: Beelzebubba
"urine is essentially sterile. "
Until you eat asparagas.
To: Wright is right!
Trust me, if you've touched the door, the stall, anything in the restroom you still need to wash :)
25
posted on
09/16/2003 7:02:17 AM PDT
by
mewzilla
To: Wright is right!
Yeh, we need to start a thread on things you can do to avoid washing your hands after using a public bathroom....nobody's mentioned using your shoe to flush the john..Next?
26
posted on
09/16/2003 7:05:40 AM PDT
by
Registered
(Gray Davis won't be baaaaahhck)
To: bedolido
Dallas/Fort Worth: males, 31 percent; females, 8 percent
John F. Kennedy, New York: males, 37 percent; females, 22 percent
Miami Dade County: males, 30 percent; females, 21 percent
O'Hare: males, 38 percent; females, 15 percent
San Francisco: males, 20 percent; females, 41 percent
Toronto: males, 5 percent; females, 3 percent
Total: males, 26 percent, females, 17 percent
SOURCE: American Society for Microbiology
Hmmm ... I wonder what the stats for CHINA might look like ...
27
posted on
09/16/2003 7:06:07 AM PDT
by
_Jim
(Resources for Understanding the Blackout of 2003 - www.pserc.wisc.edu/Resources.htm)
To: _Jim
Well, from first hand experience (no pun intended) I'd say the Chinese would be off the charts!
28
posted on
09/16/2003 7:07:47 AM PDT
by
Registered
(Gray Davis won't be baaaaahhck)
To: _Jim
thanks for cleaning up the survey (hope you washed your hands afterwards)... btw how did you get it to line up in HTML?
29
posted on
09/16/2003 7:08:17 AM PDT
by
bedolido
(I can forgive you for killing my sons, but I cannot forgive you for forcing me to kill your sons)
To: bedolido
I always wash my hands and NEVER touch the doorknob on the way out.
I told a friend, who thought I was too picky, that touching that doorknob is the sanitary equivilent of shaking hands with a man's penis.
To: _Jim
San Francisco: males, 20 percent; females, 41 percentthe "guys" in frisco use the washrooms for peeing too?
31
posted on
09/16/2003 7:10:15 AM PDT
by
bedolido
(I can forgive you for killing my sons, but I cannot forgive you for forcing me to kill your sons)
To: bedolido
I disagree that washing your hands in public rest room, especially an airport, is smart thing to do and if it stops transmission of diseases. If all I have touched in the bathroom is myself after using the urinal and if I'm relatively clean then I will not receive any germs.
If however, I use the sink to clean I may contact the faucet, the soap disoneser and the paper towel dispenser. Each time I increase my chance of having someone elses germs transfer to me.
32
posted on
09/16/2003 7:11:00 AM PDT
by
VRWC_minion
(Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and most are right)
To: 11th Earl of Mar
I told a friend, who thought I was too picky, that touching that doorknob is the sanitary equivilent of shaking hands with a man's penis.Now your talking about the San Francisco airport right?
33
posted on
09/16/2003 7:11:51 AM PDT
by
bedolido
(I can forgive you for killing my sons, but I cannot forgive you for forcing me to kill your sons)
To: bedolido
btw how did you get it to line up in HTML?I set the text up between <pre> and </pre> tages than added the required spaces to get the needed alignment ...
34
posted on
09/16/2003 7:11:54 AM PDT
by
_Jim
(Resources for Understanding the Blackout of 2003 - www.pserc.wisc.edu/Resources.htm)
To: bedolido
The "I don't pee on my hands" responses are very amusing. My take on washing after using the restroom is that it's just a good opportunity to clean your hands. You go through the day touching surfaces that many other people have also been handling (and how clean were their hands?).
Yes, "that's why we have immune systems" but we also have the ability to heal cuts and I don't deliberately break my skin open....
35
posted on
09/16/2003 7:12:38 AM PDT
by
whd23
To: _Jim
Hmmm ... I wonder what the stats for CHINA might look like Or France...
But I guess no one in France bothers to use the toilet.
To: Registered
Yeh, we need to start a thread on things you can do to avoid washing your hands after using a public bathroom....nobody's mentioned using your shoe to flush the john..Next? The "Look Ma, No Hands" shake.
To: VRWC_minion
If however, I use the sink to clean I may contact the faucet, FORTUNATELY they are going to those 'proximity' switches that then snap the water on and off ...
38
posted on
09/16/2003 7:13:52 AM PDT
by
_Jim
(Resources for Understanding the Blackout of 2003 - www.pserc.wisc.edu/Resources.htm)
To: bedolido
I never wash my hands in public bathrooms. I never touch anything in public bathrooms if at all possible (Which would include their faucets and towel dispensers). I kick doors open and flush with my foot. (And ONLY flush in a way that I can quicky RUN from the area before the SPEW from the flushing toilet rises into the air.)
If someone catches something from me, sobeit. But I'm not putting myself in a position to catch something from someone else, if at all possible. Survival of the fittest!!
To: mewzilla
Most restrooms at airports don't HAVE doors. The entries are serpentine line-of-sight blockers, and you can walk right up to the urinal without first touching ANYTHING.
Michael
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