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    9 Things in Your Home That Are Making You Sick

    http://media.zenfs.com/en-US/blogs/partner/sponges230107.jpgHome sweet home, right? Well, sort of. You may be unaware of the potential health dangers lurking in your abode-from critters in the kitchen to bugs in the bedroom. Here's what you need to know-and what to do.

    by Sarah Jio

    Your kitchen sponge

    Maybe you've heard about the germs on your kitchen sponge (gross news flash-there may be as many as 20 million microbes on it right now). But here's the deal: Your method for "cleaning" that sponge may be leaving it loaded with potentially hazardous bacteria that can make you ill. Researchers at the USDA's Agricultural Research Service found that some common cleaning methods for sponges-soaking them in a bleach solution, lemon juice or water-did not eradicate the germs.

    What to do: The best ways to clean a dirty sponge, they say, are in the microwave (on high for one minute) and in the dishwasher, which will kill 99.9 percent of all germs.

    Your boyfriend's wet towel

    Sharing a bath towel with your man may be good for the environment, but it may be bad for your health, experts warn. MRSA, a drug-resistant form of staph-also known as the superbug-is frequently transmitted by skin-to-skin contact but also by sharing personal items like towels.

    What to do: "While it may be tempting to share a towel with your guy, resist the urge," says Susan C. Taylor, M.D., community editor for bewell.com. "I warn my patients that wet towels can be a breeding ground for germs, including MRSA, which can make you sick."

    After you or your man uses a towel, send it where it belongs: to the washing machine.

    See our tips: The Truth About Germs: Your Queasy-making Questions Answered

    Your bed

    Have you been on a trip recently? If so, you may have brought home some hitchhikers-of the creepy-crawly variety. Bedbugs, tiny bloodthirsty insects, are hosts to organisms that cause hepatitis B and Chagas disease, say health experts. But the real problem seems to be the infections and allergic reactions that can sometimes result from bedbug bites.

    According to the Environmental Protection Agency, bedbugs are on the rise and becoming an increasing health problem. The insects, which hide in the crevices of mattresses and bedding, are showing up everywhere, from hostels to the swankiest hotels, and they often find their way into people's luggage, transporting themselves to unsuspecting homes.

    What to do: If you've done some traveling recently, and especially if you've noticed any mysterious bug bites, wash everything in your luggage and consider scrubbing your suitcase with a stiff brush before giving it a good vacuuming.

    Your laptop

    You're the only one who uses it, so how dirty can it be? In a word: filthy. A study by researchers at the University of North Carolina Health Care System found that keyboards were loaded with germs.

    Even more disgusting, the average public toilet bowl contains 41 germs per square inch. The average personal keyboard? Some 21,000 germs per square inch. "Toilet bowls get cleaned," says Philip M. Tierno Jr., Ph.D., director of clinical microbiology and immunology at New York University Langone Medical Center, "but keyboards rarely do."

    What to do: Tierno says the best way to keep your laptop or computer's keyboard clean is to gently wipe it down daily with disinfecting wipes.

    Related: 5 Frightening Truths About the Germs Under Your Fingernails (and His!)

    Your shower curtain

    According to research by the Center for Health, Environment & Justice, shower curtains and liners made from polyvinyl chloride (PVC) may be harmful to your health.

    Their study suggests that PVC releases potentially harmful chemicals into your bathroom. While there is still some debate among health experts about how much of these chemicals could be deemed harmful, many believe that limiting your exposure to chemicals, wherever possible, makes sense.

    What to do: Check your shower curtain's label to see if it's made of vinyl or PVC. While not all manufacturers disclose this information, some retailers, like Ikea, have banned PVC shower curtains altogether, and Target has promised to phase out the material in its shower-curtain products in the months ahead.

    Your laundry

    Nobody thinks of the washing machine as a germ magnet-that's where clothes get clean, right? Not if you're using a public machine, and especially if that machine uses water that's not hot enough, says Tierno.

    Here's why: Lower temperatures can encourage the spread of germs. Researchers at the University of Arizona found that intestinal viruses such as hepatitis A can be easily transferred from underwear to other garments during the washing process. Even worse, some germs can lurk in public washing machines and find their way to your clothes.

    What to do: Wash your underwear and towels separately, using bleach if possible, and wash all towels in water that's at least 155 degrees, which will kill most germs. Not sure if your apartment's water temperature is hot enough? Talk to the building manager.

    Dirty Dining: Restaurant Workers Behaving Badly--and Bathing in the Kitchen Sink

    Your humidifier

    Watch out for the humidifier, say germ experts. "If it's not cleaned properly, a humidifier can become a repository for legionella and other pathogens that cause respiratory infections," says Tierno.

    What to do: If you like sleeping with a humidifier in your room, be sure to clean it often-at least a few times a week-by mixing a solution of one-part bleach to 19 parts water (for most humidifiers, this would equal about a half or full cup of bleach) and letting it sit for a few minutes before rinsing well.

    Your doorknob

    Think of the people who have touched your front doorknob in the past 48 hours: the UPS man, a neighbor, a solicitor, your friends-it's easy to lose count. Now think of all the places they've been-the subway, public restrooms, grocery stores. Those germs are all on your doorknob right now, says Tierno.

    Most people let their guard down when it comes to their own door handles, he says, but we shouldn't: "Viruses can survive for days on doorknobs, and you can easily get cross contamination from them," he says.

    What to do: Make a habit of wiping down your doorknob frequently with sanitizing wipes or sprays. Have a copper doorknob? You may be in luck. Researchers in England found that copper door handles had 95 percent fewer microorganisms on them compared with other doorknobs. Scientists believe that many germs, including MRSA, may not be able to survive on copper.

    Your salt and pepper shakers

    When's the last time you cleaned your salt and pepper shakers? Exactly. These unassuming little items get touched in all parts of the meal-prep process. Example: You give your sauce a dash of salt after touching raw chicken (oops) and then later set the shaker on the table.

    What to do: Nobody thinks of cleaning their salt and pepper shakers, says Elizabeth Scott, Ph.D., assistant professor and co-director Simmons Center for Hygiene and Health in Home and Community at Simmons College, but to avoid cross-contamination and food poisoning, you should. "Best to wipe them with an EPA-registered disinfectant," she says. "But better still, always wash your hands after handling raw foods and before touching anything else."

    Related: 11 Things Guys Don't Understand About Women!

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    87 comments

    • faithinthedesert  •  2 years 9 months ago
      I'm very particular about cleaning...

      About once per 2 weeks, I spray lysol on door knobs, toilet flush handles, keyboards, and the like.

      I wash kitchen sponges once before throwing them out.. Their life cycle in my house is about a month or so.
    • Lynnette  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Have anyone ever heard that the environment inside the house is more contaminated and toxic than the outside environment? It is partly because people heed the advice of articles like this one, which foster the excessive use of chemicals to fight "germs." The toxic cleaning chemicals will do more long-lasting harm to you and your family than most germs. Just use common sense, wash your hands, clean you house normally with the least toxic chemicals possible and you should be ok.
    • J.W.  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Want the biggest scare possible ??? something that never gets mentioned for fear of mass hysteria ??? money---yep that's right your money !!! think about how many times and by whom it gets handled before it got to your pocket/purse... think about the germ/virus transmission possible here... stats say that nearly 80% of critter related illnesses begin by touching your money...
    • thatgirl  •  2 years 10 months ago
      This article opened my eyes. My son has been diagnosed with MRSA for the past 11 months. We have been racking our brains to figure out what caused it. He hangs his towel up after each shower. This mystery has been solved as to how he contacted it. It is true that MRSA is drug resistant. He has been taking antibiotics and using ointments for the past 9 months, and this MRSA has not cleared.
    • kathryn  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Is there anything left in our lives that won't kill us faster or give us cancer? Everyday it seems that we are given a new list of things to avoid or that is harmful. Now doing your laundry can kill you...so what is the alternative? Wear dirty clothes that smell? I mean if they are comparing using a tanning bed to being posined with arsenic, what are we to think.
    • martza  •  2 years 10 months ago
      wow! thanks for the 411
    • ABCDEFG  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Dumb. I'm still alive with no diseases yet so how about dumb articles keep making people paranoid for nothing like aren't paranoid enough already. If people have been doing these things for how many years now? and I've never heard of serious bug breakouts from my kitchen sponge or shower curtain. Lighten up clean freaks.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Really people it is all about common sense. Just clean up behind yourself and the world will be a better place to live. I was always taught to wash my hands pick up my dirty clothes and have respect for others. I am 48 years old and I am still healthy! Kathy Sligh
    • David  •  2 years 10 months ago
      So lets see if I take my dirty towel #2 and put it into my washing machine #6 does that make my dirty towel the #1 dirtiest thing?

      Deep thoughts by Jack Hand
    • k8blujay  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Hmm... if you PVC shower curtian leaves a chemicle then wouldn't your water pipes or the cities water distribution pipes? Since I am sure that MOST cities use PVC to run water lines... Or is it the steam in the bathroom that creates the harmful toxins out into the air?
    • ...  •  2 years 10 months ago
      THANKS for the article. Most of it is common sense, however its a great reminder. I am a bit OCD when it comes to certain things, like sharing bath towels, and lysol sprays and wipes on just about everything. Its expecially important when you have young ones around.
    • M. L.  •  2 years 10 months ago
      I think most of us really knew a lot of this but we need to be reminded, because we get lazy.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  2 years 10 months ago
      I already have OCD... this article doesn't help much.
    • Joe  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Wow, what an alarmist article....

      "Just think, you could get sick TODAY just by touching your laptop keyboard!" OMG! No wonder so many people have problems with anxiety, EVERYTHING is bad/evil/makes you sick...
    • Mr. Johnson  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Kissing gives out germs, so does having sex. Now granted this is a good list, we do have white blood cells for a reason. If keyboards didn't hurt us then, why should it now? And honestly, I would rather have germs, than run hot water on my color clothes. It's not worth it to me...
    • david vare  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Your what to do for sanitiaing towels is to wash them in 155 degree water. This is not possible for 99% of households. Why? Because in the name of safety, water heaters are not set at this temprature. Water heaters are usually set at 120 degrees to prevent scalding. If your lucky you will find one set between 130 and 140, but never at 155 degrees. Do you have another solution???
    • Robin  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Long ago my father-in-law said, "Wash your Hands!" I never forgot it and it became our family's rule. Hence, we were rarely sick.
    • Fernando  •  2 years 10 months ago
      Maybe everything written is right, but if I follow all the intructions, I would not be able to do other things.
      i will stick to the basics. Wash hands before each meal and do not touch my face my face at all.
    • Vinny  •  2 years 10 months ago
      people are waaaaaaaay too clean...antibacterial soap, antibacterial handsanitizer, antibacterial dishwashing liquids..!!!! come on, not all bacteria are bad. don't waste your time zapping your sponge in the microwave, just rinse it really well with hot water when you finish with the dishes.

      kids who play outside and get dirty and get a little sick from it actually is a good thing. it helps their bodies get stronger by building the body's resistance. don't get me wrong okay? I'm just saying let kids fool around a little bit and it's okay to get a little sick. stop trying to santize the whole environment.
    • Trudy  •  2 years 10 months ago
      This world is getting crazy and your buying into it.
      CLEAN your home but don't get crazy.
      Grew up drinking off the hose, sharing bottles of pepsi & taking a bath
      twice a week. Never had any sickness.
      Raise 3 children and they never been sick.

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