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Purse
Hygeine
One of
our clients, Alana sent this interesting note in.
I am unsure
of the original author but it contains some useful ideas:
WHERE
HAS YOUR PURSE BEEN?
Have
you ever noticed gals who sit their purses on public restroom floors
that go directly to their dining tables? Happens a lot! It's not
always the ''restaurant food' that causes stomach distress.
Sometimes
"what you don't know 'will' hurt you"! Read on.
.Mom
got so upset when a guest came in the door and plopped their purses
down on the counter where she was cooking or setting up the buffet.
She
always said that purses are really dirty, because of Where they
have been.
Smart
Momma!
It's
something just about every woman carries with them.
While
we may know what's inside our purses, do you have any idea what's
on the outside?
Shauna
Lake put purses to the test - for bacteria - with surprising results.
You
may think twice about where you put your purse. Women carry purses
everywhere; from the office to public >restrooms to the floor
of the car.
Most women won't be caught without their purses, but did you ever
stop to think about where your purse goes during the day? "I
drive a school bus, so my purse has been on the floor of the bus
a lot,"says one woman.
"On the floor of my car, probably in restrooms."
"I
put my purse in grocery shopping carts, on the floor of bathroom
stalls while changing a diaper," says another woman and of
course in my home which should be clean."
We
decided to find out if purses harbor a lot of bacteria.
We learned how to test them at Nelson Laboratories in Salt Lake,
then we set out to test the average woman's purse. Most women told
us they didn't stop to think about what was on the bottom
of their purse.
Most
said they usually set their purses on top of kitchen tables and
counters where food is prepared.
Most
of the ladies we talked to told us they wouldn't be surprised if
their purses were at least a little bit dirty.
It
turns out purses are so surprisingly dirty, even the microbiologist
who >tested them was shocked.
Microbiologist
Amy Karren of Nelson Labs says nearly all of the purses tested were
not only high in bacteria, but high in harmful kinds of bacteria.
Pseudomonas
can cause eye infections, staphylococcus aurous can cause serious
skin infections, and salmonella and e-coli found on the purses could
make people very sick. In one sampling, four of five purses tested
positive for salmonella, and that's not the worst of it.
"There is fecal contamination on the purses," says Amy.
Leather or vinyl purses tended to be cleaner than cloth purses,
and lifestyle seemed to play a role.
People
with kids tended to have dirtier purses than those without, with
one exception.
The purse of one single woman who frequented nightclubs had one
of the worst contaminations of all.
"Some
type of feces, or even possibly vomit or something like that."
So
the moral of this story - your purse won't kill you, but it does
has the>potential to make you very sick if you keep it on places
where you eat. Use hooks to hang your purse at home and in restrooms,
and don't put it on your desk, a restaurant table, or on your kitchen
countertop.
Experts
say you should think of your purse the same way you would a pair
of shoes. "If you think about putting a pair of shoes onto
your countertops, that's the same thing you're doing when you put
your purse on the countertops" - your purse has gone where
every individual before you has spat, coughed, urinated, emptied
bowels, etc! Do you really want to bring that home with you?
The
microbiologists at Nelson also said cleaning a purse will help.
Wash cloth purses and use leather cleaner to clean the bottom of
leather purses.
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