You need to wash towels more often than you think because poo is all around us
Oh dear lord. Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the bathroom, experts are telling us that our towels are probably dirtier than our toilet and we all need to get a handle on this sh*t. Literally.
Pesky poop
University of Arizona microbiologist Charles Gerba has alerted us to this rather pesky poo problem. He says the bathroom environment encourages the transfer of faecal organisms to towels, particularly when people dry their hands without washing them properly.
“Your hands touch faecal organisms like coliform bacteria—organisms that can indicate the presence of disease-causing bacteria in water—Escherichia coli or even Salmonella,” Time Magazine reports.
Read more about cleanliness and germs:
- The dirt on getting dirty: How clean do kids really need to be?
- Stressed by mess? How to cope when your kids trash your life
- 10 ways to stay as healthy as possible when your kids keep getting sick
Gerba has looked into this germs sitch very thoroughly. He explains that in one of his studies, he found nearly 90 percent of bathroom towels were contaminated with coliform bacteria (a bacteria that lives in our colons) and about 14 percent carried E. coli bacteria (a potentially dangerous bacteria found in the intestines of humans and animals).
Gerba has also found these bacteria on kitchen hand towels, and he says the numbers of E. coli directly related to how frequently towels were washed.
“After about two days, if you dry your face on a hand towel, you’re probably getting more E. coli on your face than if you stuck your head in a toilet and flushed it,” Gerba told Time Magazine.
Fighting back!
So what can we do about these worrying, germy poop-towels? There are a whole bunch of infection-fighting approaches:
- Hot wash towels thoroughly – every two days – with the right products: The experts say we need to wash towels thoroughly every two days, especially if there are small children in the house. Because bacteria can survive regular detergent, Gerba suggests washing towels in hot water and using a product with activated oxygen bleach to kill the bugs.
- Wash hands properly every, single time: Make sure you – and your kids – wash hands (and body parts) very well before drying them with a towel that may be re-used.
- Dry towels well after use: Towels that stay damp and moist are a particularly attractive breeding ground for bacteria, so make sure you are drying your towels thoroughly after use.
- Be vigilant if you have cuts or similar: It’s also important to note that generally, our bodies cope pretty well with this exposure to bacteria, but if we have cuts or cracked, dry skin we should be extra careful. There’s a higher risk of infection via open wounds as microbes can enter our bodies and make us sick.