When it comes to germ hot spots in a hotel room, the TV remote is among
the items most heavily contaminated with 67.6 colony-forming units
(CFU) of bacteria, according to a study that University of Houston
researchers presented to the American Society for Microbiology.
The study also found high levels of bacterial contamination on the
bedside lamp switch (112.7 CFU of aerobic bacteria and 111.1 CFU of
fecal bacteria), while some of the highest levels of contamination were
found in items from housekeeping carts, such as sponges and mops (at
least 500 CFU of aerobic and fecal bacteria were found on the sponges),
posing a risk for cross-contamination between rooms.
By comparison, one study of environmental cleanliness in hospitals
recommended a top limit of 5 CFU per cubic centimeter squared.
For this most recent hotel room study, University of Houston
researchers, along with researchers from Purdue University and the
University of South Carolina sampled various surfaces from hotel rooms
in Texas, Indiana and South Carolina. They tested the levels of total
aerobic bacteria and coliform (fecal) bacterial contamination.
Read more:
http://www.cleanlink.com/news/article.asp?id=14430
Monday, November 26, 2012
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