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    5 Things in Your Kitchen that Could Make You Sick

    By Nicci Micco, M.S., Content Director, Custom Publishing & Licensing for EatingWell

    5 Things in Your Kitchen That Could Make You SickEvery year, 76 million Americans get sick from food, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Nothing you can do will ever guarantee 100 percent protection against foodborne illness, but taking certain precautions can help reduce your risk. Some of these protective steps are common sense, like washing your hands before you eat. Others aren't so obvious. Read on to discover five surprising sources of foodborne "bugs" in your kitchen, we've written about in EatingWell Magazine, and how to protect yourself.
    Related: 10 Rules for a Healthy Kitchen

    Kitchen threat #1: Your kitchen sponge. When participants in a study from NSF International (an independent public health organization) swabbed various items in their houses, the kitchen sponge was by far the germiest. In fact, it harbored 150 times more bacteria, mold and yeast than a toothbrush holder. "You pick up bacteria when cleaning, but because you rarely disinfect that sponge between uses, germs multiply," says Rob Donofrio, M.S., Ph.D., NSF's director of microbiology. While the majority of germs they found won't make you sick some, such as Salmonella and E. coli, can cause serious illness. The best way to de-germ your sponge: microwave a wet sponge for two minutes daily and replace it every two weeks.
    Must-Read: 7 More Unexpected Uses for Your Microwave

    Kitchen threat #2: Your fridge. Cold temperatures slow the growth of bacteria, so it's important to make sure that your refrigerator doesn't rise above 40°F. Reduce your risk of foodborne illness by keeping tabs on your fridge temp with a thermometer. You can buy a "refrigerator/freezer thermometer" at appliance stores, home centers (e.g., Home Depot) and online kitchen stores.

    Kitchen threat #3: Cutting boards. Bacteria from uncooked meat, poultry and fish can contaminate cooked foods and fresh produce. An important way to reduce this risk is to use separate cutting boards for raw meat/poultry/fish and produce/cooked foods.
    Related: 9 Products for a Healthier Kitchen

    Kitchen threat #4: Uncooked eggs. If you enjoy eating eggs with runny yolks or snitching a bit of raw batter when you're making cookies, you're not alone. But the USDA recommends avoiding raw or undercooked eggs (especially for young children and the elderly) because of the possibility of foodborne illness, like Salmonella. If you can't keep your hands (or your kids' hands) out of the cookie batter or you're working with a recipe that calls for raw or undercooked eggs, consider pasteurized-in-the-shell eggs. They're no different than regular eggs except they've been heat-treated to kill any harmful bacteria-making them safe to consume raw or partially cooked. Look for them in large supermarkets near other in-the-carton eggs.
    Don't Miss: 5 Common Foodborne Bacteria You Want to Avoid

    Kitchen threat #5: Recalled items. You should discard any food that's been recalled because it's associated with the outbreak of a foodborne illness. But according to a survey conducted by Rutgers University, only about 60 percent of Americans search their homes for foods that have been recalled because of contamination. Whenever there's a food recall, check products stored at home to make sure they are safe. For more information on food recalls, visit www.recalls.gov.

    Related: How to Keep Your Food Pure From Everyday Toxins

    What do you do to keep your kitchen and your food safe?

    By Nicci Micco

    Nicci Micco

    Nicci Micco is Content Director, Custom Publishing & Licensing for EatingWell and co-author of EatingWell 500-Calorie Dinners. She has a master's degree in nutrition and food sciences, with a focus in weight management.


    More from EatingWell:

     
    • Brenda  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  1 month 23 days ago
      kids need to build up their resestance to germs and such. You don't have to be overly clean.
    • Jan  •  Liberty Lake, Washington  •  2 months ago
      I actually look for the food that has warnings out on it. Never take the govts word for anything, they lie easily.
      Did you hear about the bot found in pickled asparagus? What a lie! E coli found in spinach? A naturally occurring bacteria. Arsenic in apple juice? Again, naturally occurring. Yeah, go ahead and tell me the numbers were higher than govt recommendations.
      Never take the govts word for anything.
    • BiggestIdiotOn3rdRock  •  San Diego, California  •  3 months ago
      !!!!!! Sooooooo, I guess I should stop brushing my teeth with the kitchen sponge ???!!!!!!
      • peachis 3 months ago
        lol funny!!!!!!!!!!
      • Briar Rose 3 months ago
        Probably.

        I stopped using a Toothbrush to clean my bathroom.

        Not the right tool for the job.
      • borchard 3 months ago
        hahahahahahaha
    • PHILLIP  •  3 months ago
      Avoid eating, drinking breathing or touching anything and you will not be exposed to pathogens.
      • Sherrill 3 months ago
        So true,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, use common sense,,, actually most people dont have any!!
      • djdancing49 3 months ago
        common sense? HeH heh most are trying to put bread on the table and not lose

        their jobs and common sense? Y not bag your lunch at home its cheaper. Dj.
      • GEORGE 3 months ago
        As kids we played in the dirt some times ate it and were exposed to lead paint and were transported in cars with no seat belts and we are still alive. Go figure
    • fedup  •  Owensboro, Kentucky  •  3 months ago
      Most of these tips are just plain old common sense rules to follow in the kitchen. I thought I was going to read about something new.
      • Victoria 3 months ago
        Fedup . . . I*m sure these tips are new to many people. I know some of them.
      • brini 3 months ago
        pretty sad, I can't imagine why no one has a clue. maybe they had someone cleaning up aftern them all their life and don't get it
      • Mel 3 months ago
        You'd be surprised how uncommon "common sense" is nowadays...
    • Jacce  •  3 months ago
      So many dos and don'ts, it's a wonder humans ever survived....
      • Ralph 3 months ago
        i agree with you there, to listen to these people it is a real wonder that anyone or anything survived without them.
      • Beverly 3 months ago
        exactly
      • chris 3 months ago
        you are so right, how did we ever survive , as kids we ate raw hamburger, took baloney or bologna ( for those who like to comment on proper spelling) sandwiches in our paper bags kept at room temp till we ate them hours later along with warm milk,
        rode bikes w/o helmets or pads, no one knew what a seat belt was let alone a car seat , walked to and from school and sports, no soccer moms then, when it rained we got wet, no video games we all played outside, we didn't know what racism was or cared what where or even knew where our other friends daddy's worked at . if we got hurt at a neighbors no lawyers were involved , we got out of hand any adult would set us straight , and all adults were addressed as Mr or Mrs
        I could go on but I wont.
    • one in 9 billion  •  Cheyenne, Wyoming  •  3 months ago
      /we all survived our childhoods, with just basic soap and water. Think about the things you ate as a child? you lived. (didn't you)
      • Ildico Hun 3 months ago
        My brother died from such things.......
      • dan 3 months ago
        The neighbor kida ate his boogers and grew up to be the garbage man.
      • Mr LOL 3 months ago
        i like pie.
    • studee  •  Kalamazoo, Michigan  •  3 months ago
      along those same lines its been said that a woman's hand bag or purse can carry a lot of germs - say a woman uses a public rest room and sets her bag on the floor while shes goes to the bath room and than goes home and sits her bag on the kitchen counter - you just brought home a lot of germs from the public restroom floor and put them on your kitchen counter -
    • EF  •  Irvine, California  •  3 months ago
      I knew cleaning the kitchen witha sponge would make me sicker than if I just left the kitchen a mess
    • mr  •  3 months ago
      This reporter has a wonderful grasp of the obvious.
    • Ed  •  Barnstable, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
      I was born in the mid fifties. We didn't have coolers and Ice Packs to bring our lunch to school. The Tuna (or whatever) sandwich sat in the locker on a hot day 4 hours before I ate it. Never got sick. I have 2 kitchen sponges that go in the Dishwasher every night. Cutting boards too. Everyone is so Over Sanitized these days, thats why so many people are sick. But don't forget to get that flu shot or vaccination that has Mercury and dead germs from raw chicken embryos. That's OK 'cause Big Pharma will still get rich on making you sick and pumping in the meds to make you worse. This country's big powers are such Liars. Educate yourself and READ. Research things. That's one of the Positive Powers of the Internet.
    • J. Frank Pinell  •  3 months ago
      People have been become too paranoid with "clean". I know someone who "has to" take 2 showers everyday, she gets annoyed when someone leans against her walls, walks in with their shoes on, scrubs her floor everyday (then she wonders why the shine isn't there anymore), doesn't want her husband to use the same washroom at home because "he doesn't spray everything down when he's done", want me to go on? She almost has a heart attack if you tell her you don't clean as much as she does. I finally got it through to her that hydrogen peroxide can do as well, if not better job, than all these fancy expensive poisonous-fume cleaners. -Then she wonders why her immune system isn't up to par. I told her once I'd take her out in the barn and let her pet all the animals just to see what I'd get out of her! :) Mother Nature did not throw all these bacteria, etc. on this earth just to make us sick. If we'd stop ruining our health and bodies with all the chemicals and food preservatives, and what-not, things might be better for us.
    • Jean  •  3 months ago
      Hardly anyone that I know has gotten sick from their kitchens all of these years, yet people are always writing these articles.
    • ZitoWithCheese  •  Fresno, California  •  3 months ago
      Theses articles always make me laugh so hard. I mean we have managed to survive in our kitchens for decades now without problems. Then they make a commercial showing germs everwhere for all the germaphobes. Now you cant been sane until you have "cleaned the counter" with their product.
    • retired fox  •  Fresno, California  •  3 months ago
      Every sponge in the grocery store says'DO NOT MICROWAVE" read the lables.As soon as you start microwaving them they start to come apart.
    • Sam Mathews  •  Doylestown, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
      I try hard to keep things clean all the time. Lots of hot soapy water, clean everything after each time used.
    • Pettitcagreco  •  Irvine, California  •  2 months ago
      I will just go get a big plastic clear ballon and live inside the bubble...People, I would not worry about this too much, heck I used to crawl around the pig slob, horse manure and in infected waters during my military days in both training and war time days while with the Marine Corps. This country is becoming too much of a wimp....(selected a nicer word) I would listen to the old school people and it was hard to believe how they lived back in the day.My neighbor wears rubber gloves when he is watering the lawn..I just laugh at him because he was the same guy who went for counseling because of something he saw on tv that upset him. #$%$So in other words, stop worrying and start living your life, we all are going to die and stop worrying .
    • Choice  •  Denver, Colorado  •  3 months ago
      Whoa...my sponge just ran across the kitchen...Guess I send the Cockroach warriors after it...problem solved..
    • E and L  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
      Just thin the herd, for god's sake!
    • Dre  •  3 months ago
      Know what else is making you sick? Not exposing yourself to any of these "dangers." Trying to live in a bubble and bathing in Purell once you step out! That is what is making you sick! Me, I overcompensate for the puses that listen to this sage advice by only drinking water squeezed from the sponge, keeping the fridge above 40 degrees, cutting some chicken on my cutting board followed by a quick rinse and then cutting some veggies, doubling down on the uncooked eggs, and lastly only purchasing products that have been recalled. The result...never been healthier.
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