After
you read the stories below you can save
yourself - and your purse - from picking up the germs
from the floor of your local restaurant. To buy purse
hangers, click
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STORY
1, FROM ABC NEWS, By ELISABETH LEAMY, Aug. 8, 2006 |
Your
Purse Could Be Making You Sick
A Microbiologist Found Millions of Germs on Purses
Women
rarely go anywhere without a purse, which means that
if a woman enters a place full of germs, so does her
bag. That could mean she ends up carrying around microbes
that could make her sick all day long.
Microbiologist
Chuck Gerba researches where organisms that make us
sick lurk and lately he says he has found that germs
gather on the outside of a woman's purse, especially
on the bottom.
"We
found fecal bacteria you normally find on the floor
of restroom," he said. "We found bacteria
that can cause skin infections on the bottom of purses.
What's more amazing is the large numbers we find on
the bottom of purses, which indicates that they can
be picking up a lot of other germs like cold viruses
or viruses that cause diarrhea."
Using
a hand-held germ meter, Gerba demonstrated how much
bacteria can grow on a woman's purse for ABC News, with
results that ranged from scary to downright terrifying.
Health experts worry when the meter reads over 200,
which means thousands of bacteria are present.
He found thousands of germs on one woman's purse. She
bought her bag about a month ago and Gerba's measurements
showed her purse also carried thousands of germs. ABC
News is not naming the women who participated in order
to protect their identities.
"I'll
probably just get a new one," she said.
Yet
another woman has been carrying a handbag around for
years and Gerba said that he found "hundreds of
thousands of germs on the surface."
Gerba
found about half a million bacteria on the bottom of
one woman's large bag.
Subways
for Germs
Each time ABC News and Gerba ran an instant field test
and later a lab test on swabs from the outside bottom
of 10 women's purses, every single one had at least
some bacteria, most had tens of thousands and a few
were saturated with millions. One even had 6.7 million
bacteria.
Half
of the bags tested positive for coliform bacteria, which
indicated the possible presence of human or animal waste.
Many
women ABC News interviewed were not concerned.
"It
doesn't bother me. I don't touch the bottom of my purse,"
the woman with the large bag said.
But
Gerba said that women who carry around bags with them
at all times should be concerned.
"It
matters because you can move germs that can cause illness
from one location to another," he said. "You
can later touch that purse and get them on your hands,
or you could put your purse near a food preparation
area and transfer germs to areas you may touch during
food preparation."
Some
women argued that they do not lick the bottom of their
purses, so they should not be in danger of getting sick,
but it is very easy to unknowingly transfer germs. For
example, whatever touched the bottom of your purse touches
you when you grab it. If you eat a sandwich soon after
that, the germs go right into your mouth.
"The
purses are really becoming subways for micro organisms,"
Gerba said. "They're being transferred from one
location to another. So it's just like germ 'public
transportation.' I'm afraid to touch them. You know,
I know too much. I'll never become a purse snatcher,
believe me."
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STORY
2, FROM NEWSMAX, NewsMax.com Wires, Friday, Aug. 25, 2006
|
Ladies,
Your Purse Could Make You Sick
A
purse can carry almost everything ... including an overabundance
of germs and bacteria.
Researchers
at the University of Arizona tested dozens of women's
purses. Every single one had at least some contaminants
that could cause sickness. Most had tens of thousands.
One even reached the 6.7 million mark. (And that particular
lady had purchased her handbag in the previous month.)
When
microbiologist Chuck Gerba, who lead the study, demonstrated
his discovery on ABC News by using a hand-held meter
on audience members' purses, he found that half the
bags tested positive for coliform bacteria - also known
as fecal matter.
It
was the bottom of the purses that contained the majority
of the germs.
And
the reason is simple.
We
ladies set down our bags on the floor in public restrooms.
We then put them on the microbe-laden sink to wash our
hands.
Many
women also place their purse in the toddler seat of
the shopping cart at the grocery store. (Those seats
typically cradle the bums of children wearing leaky
diapers.) They toss them under their chair in a restaurant
where the last customer just dropped a shrimp. And who
doesn't plop their bag on the ground from time to time,
possibly in the same spot where the neighbor just walked
his dog.
"Purses
are becoming subways for micro organisms," said
Gerba. "They're being transferred from one location
to another. So it's like germ public transportation'."
The
real concern is that women carry their purses then eat
a sandwich or prepare a family meal.
Scientists
suggest that all purses, briefcases and backpacks should
be wiped down once a week with a disinfectant wipe to
avoid contracting viruses that can cause the common
cold or diarrhea.
"I'm
afraid to touch them," Gerba said. "I'll never
become a purse snatcher, believe me."
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STORY
3, About.com, MAY 2006 |
A
Dog's Mouth Is Cleaner than Your Purse
LADIES/MEN,
BEWARE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This
is very informative.
This
is a factual report aired today on Health News, Fox
5, Atlanta, GA. A study was recently performed on women's
purses. A health team went to a local mall and took
samples from the bottom of 50 women's purses. The purses
were swabbed with cotton swabs along the entire bottom
of the purses and placed into special containers. The
swabs were then processed at a local laboratory.
The
Health Report also showed where women place their purses:
public restrooms (on the floor beside the toilet), kitchen
counters & kitchen tables, on tables & chairs
in restaurants, etc. The results of the laboratory tests
contained the following most serious result: 1 out of
4 purses contained E COLI. Other extremely serious bacteria
also were listed, including Hepatitis.
They
recommended that women should DAILY wipe their purses
(particularly the bottom) with a disinfectant wipe and
to be extremely careful where you set your purse. Most
important, do NOT place your purse on a table (anywhere)
where you will eat or on a kitchen counter, and do not
put it anywhere close to a toilet. Remember, when you
flush a toilet, the spray goes a distance that is unrecognizable
by the human eye.
WASH
YOUR HANDS as often as you can! Keep an antibacterial
hand sanitizer cleaner (no water needed) in your purse
and use it often! And as soon as you get home from shopping
(or wherever you have been and used your purse), immediately
wipe it all over with a disinfectant wipe.
MEN
who do not wash their hands after relieving themselves
should be ASHAMED! Not only that, they are seriously
affecting your health and their own. My husband has
told me many, many times (over 50% ratio) that he has
seen men in public restrooms relieve themselves, zip
up, and immediately leave the restroom without washing
their hands!! Women, get on your men and be sure they
are washing thoroughly after using the restroom.
My
hubby also noted that everyone spends all this time
washing their hands and then grabs the door handle to
exit the restroom. So DUH! All those other folks who
did NOT wash their hands have their germs all over the
door handle! And I have seen many women who do NOT wash
their hands after using the restroom. So, use that paper
towel you dried your hands on to open the door and then
dispose of it in the closest waste receptacle. (Women,
please do not put it in your purse!).
Please
do your part for yourself and everyone else! As soon
as I saw the report, I immediately cleaned my purse
with my Clorox Antibacterial Wipe and then set it on
a paper towel, where I normally place it on a table
in our den. And I asked my hubby to PLEASE scold me
if he ever saw me putting my purse on the kitchen table
or counter again!
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STORY
4, lifeScript, OCTOBER 2006 |
Women's
Purses Play Host to Germs
Germ
colonies lurk anywhere and everywhere they can make
a home, from keyboards to door knobs, phone receivers
to laundry hampers. One place women may not think to
find germs, though, is their purse or handbag. All the
more surprising, then, are the findings of a recent
study of germ counts on the surface of the average woman's
purse. According to researchers at Nelson Laboratories
in Salt Lake City, Utah, women's purses may be not only
high in overall germ counts, but especially prone to
carrying some of the most harmful varieties of bugs.
Among the nasty bacteria found on purses were salmonella
and E. coli, which can cause food poisoning and gastrointestinal
problems, and pseudomonas, which causes eye infections.
Perhaps even more cringe-worthy: researchers found evidence
of trace fecal contamination on the majority of the
purses tested. Results of the study were reported in
a recent piece by the local news affiliate KUTV.
What
This Means for You
In general, handbags made from leather or vinyl were
found to be less germ-prone than cloth purses. Most
germ-populated of all were purses of women who reported
frequenting nightclubs, bars or other high-traffic public
areas. For cloth purses, researchers recommended regular
washing. Leather or vinyl handbags should be cleaned
with fabric-appropriate solvents.
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