Subscribe now!!


Wednesday, September 20, 2000


Silicon Valley Saga Series


News
    Front page stories
    National network
    International
    Analysis
    Editorials

Supplements
   Headstart
   Lifemate

Email Newsletter
Get the daily news headlines in your inbox

Weather

Letters
to the Editor

Columnists

Express Interactive
  
Chat
   Ebate

Group sites


Intel IT Update

 

Ugh! New York remains city that never washes up
ASSOCIATED PRESS


TORONTO, SEPT 19: Apparently the city that never sleeps is also too busy to wash up. A new survey of public restroom habits in five US cities finds New York commuters are least likely to clean their hands after using the john.The results released yesterday, are the latest installment in the American Society for Microbiology's effort to cajole folks into following mom's most basic hygiene advice.

Four years ago, the society sponsored a study to see how often people take time for soap and water in restrooms. Researchers stood around, endlessly combing their hair or putting on makeup, while watching what people did or didn't do. They found that about one-third of the Americans skipped washing. So the society sponsored a ``clean hands campaign'' to educate folks about the importance of hand washing in stopping the spread of cold, diarrhoea and other infectious diseases.

This month, the society did the survey again. The results showed that not much had changed. If anything, the Americans were even slightly more sloven than they were in 1996. Especially in New York city, it seems. Four years ago, 60 per cent of folks using the rest rooms at Grand Central and Penn stations washed up afterward. This time, it was just 49 per cent. To the microbiology society of infection control experts, this means serious business. ``Fifteen seconds of soap and water and rubbing your hands is a wonderful way to get germs off. We are not making a lot of progress,'' said the society's secretary and microbiologist Judy Daly of Primary Children's Medical Center in Salt Lake city.

Besides the New York train stations, the observers peeked at bathroom habits at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, the Navy Pier in Chicago, a Braves game in Atlanta and a casino in New Orleans. Among the findings: Overall, 67 per cent of people washed with soap and water and then dried their hands. The cleanest people were in Chicago, where 83 per cent washed, followed by 80 per cent in San Francisco and 64 per cent in New Orleans and Atlanta. Women were generally more likely than men to wash. The dirtiest guys of all were at the Atlanta ball game, just one-third stopped to wash.

In a telephone survey conducted at the same time, 95 per cent of the Americans claimed they washed their hands after using public restrooms. About three-quarters said they also washed before handling food or after changing a diaper. Microbiology officials released the data at their annual meeting in Toronto. Without belaboring the obvious, they said that people really should wash up after using a public restroom, no matter what they do in there. It's just an environment where people are likely to encounter a lot of germs, especially the ones that cause diarrhoea. ``It's cheap, it's easy to do, and it works,'' noted Dr Julie Gerberding of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Both years, the survey found similar differences in hand-washing habits in the five cities. However, the researchers are not sure what to make of this. However, folks in some places may truly be cleaner than others. But other factors could also help explain the difference, such as how crowded the restrooms are, how clean or filthy they are and how big a rush people are in.

Copyright © 2000 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.

   

Back to Indian Express Home Photo Gallery Write in Entertainment Sports Business