Handbags

I've never passed anything on to this group I've gotten in email but this sort of made me go "hmmmmmm". I'm not a germ freak and have used just soap and water and sometimes a little bleach to keep me and my family clean and very healthy since the Apostles were Cub Scouts, it's worked fine and I've never used "anti bacterial" anything. BUT, I think you need to be smart. I threw a hissy when I found the boys putting their gym shoes on the kitchen counter, gave them a huge lecture about where THOSE had been and we have food on that counter. The following is something I had never considered.

Read on...

Have you ever noticed women who sit their handbags on public toilet floors, then go directly to their dining tables and set it on the table? Happens a lot!

It's not always the 'restaurant food' that causes stomach distress. Sometimes "what you don't know will hurt you"!

Mom got so upset when guests came in the door and plopped their handbags down on the counter where she was cooking or setting up food. She always said that handbags are really dirty, because of where they have been.

It's something just about every woman carries with them. While we may know what's inside our handbags, do you have any idea what's on the outside? Women carry handbags everywhere; from the office to public toilets to the floor of the car Most women won't be caught without their handbags, but did you ever stop to think about where your handbag goes during the day.

"I drive a school bus, so my handbag has been on the floor of the bus a lot," says one woman. "On the floor of my car, and in toilets."

"I put my handbag in grocery shopping carts and on the floor of the toilet," says another woman "and of course in my home which should be clean."

We decided to find out if handbags harbor a lot of bacteria. We learned how to test them at Nelson Laboratories in Salt Lake , and then we set out to test the average woman's handbag.

Most women told us they didn't stop to think about what was on the bottom of their handbag. Most said at home they usually set their handbags 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 handbags were at least a little bit dirty.

It turns out handbags are so surprisingly dirty, even the microbiologist who tested them was shocked.

Microbiologist Amy Karen of Nelson Labs says nearly all of the handbags tested were not only high in bacteria, but high in harmful kinds of bacteria. Pseudomonas can cause eye infections, staphylococcus aureaus can cause serious skin infections, and salmonella and EColi found on the handbags could make people very sick.

In one sampling, four of five handbags tested positive for salmonella, and that's not the worst of it. "There is fecal contamination on the handbags" says Amy. Leather or vinyl handbags tended to be cleaner than cloth handbags, and lifestyle seemed to play a role. People with kids tended to have dirtier handbags than those without, with one exception.

The handbag of one single woman who frequented nightclubs had one of the worst contaminations of all. "Some type of feces, or possibly vomit" says Amy.

So the moral of this story is that your handbag won't kill you, but it does have the potential to make you very sick if you keep it on places where you eat.

Use hooks to hang your handbag at home and in toilets, and don't put it on your desk, a restaurant table, or on your kitchen countertop.

Experts say you should think of your handbag 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 handbag on the countertops" - Your handbag has gone where individuals before you have sneezed, coughed, spat, urinated, emptied bowels, etc!

Do you really want to bring that home with you?

The microbiologists at Nelson also said cleaning a handbag will help. Wash cloth handbags and use leather cleaner to clean the bottom of leather handbags.

This isn't really just a handbag thing. Men & women carry around briefcases, computer cases, backpacks, book bags etc, all having been pretty much the same places as handbags. Where have those shopping (not grocery ) bags, been when you get home and put them on the counters and tables?

Reply to
Val
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No kidding!! Maybe I *don't* forget where I put my handbag......it's actually crawling away :P

Val

Reply to
Val

Much of my misspent youth was spent working at the local mall and from all the things that I've seen *there* in the public ladies rooms, I have NEVER put my purse on the floor. Never. Ever.

Women can be every bit, if not MORE, nasty than even the most drunken, immature male college student (no offense). I have seen ladies rooms that prove that fact. In fact, it got so bad there (and this was, believe it or not, an upscale mall) that most of the gals that worked at the mall just gave up on the ladies' room and just used the mens!!

Anyway, I always hang it up. Or if worse comes to worse, I will balance it on one of those huge toilet paper dispensers (the ones that are the size of the average Volkswagen Bug) and lean against it to keep it from falling. Or, better yet, since I don't keep make-up in my purse, I'll just leave it with hubby at the table in restaurants, or have DD hold it while shopping!! Those two are messy, too, but at least I know where they've been!! LOL!!

Reply to
SewVeryCreative

What a valuable subject! I've always been a bit on the OCD side of what germs I want to encounter. Of course, I'm an RN and every job I had emphasized infection control (Labor & Delivery, Newborn and NICU, Surgical Dept.). It's affected everything I do -- where I put my dishcloth; how I clean everything in the house; where I eat out; how I store food in my refridgerator; what soaps and detergents I use; even what jewelry I wear.

It can get out-of-hand unless you're willing to use some common sense along with your war on germs. LOL If you have kids or pets, you need to consider a lot of things, and temper it with being "normal."

It's important to see a possible problem, when everyone else is clueless. Like where you put your handbag. Or where you put your grocery bags after you pay for things at the store. Or when you try on shoes at the store. Think about those cosmetics demonstrations. Think about shaking hands (this weirds me out sometimes). Or who is kissing your baby.

I'm sure you can add your own nit-pickers. Don't be afraid of setting good examples; don't be embarrassed.

René

Reply to
René

Reply to
joan8904 in Bellevue Nebraska

You know, a very superstitious woman told me once to never set my purse on the floor, or I would never have any money! I bet this is one of those superstitions based on good common sense!

Reply to
TinaR

Reply to
Melanie Rimmer

Melanie, I'm with you. I agree with your statement wholeheartedly!

Donna in (SW) Idaho

Reply to
Donna in Idaho

Reply to
Taria

Thanks for saying what I was thinking, Melanie.

Julia in MN

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Melanie Rimmer wrote:

Reply to
Julia in MN

My immune system is fairly strong and will take just about anything - its had good training.

However we had various directives from Women's Institute about baking for them, and several members had to do a hygiene course so they could keep an eye on the rest of us.

For a time the committee were so scared of everybody being poisoned they stopped doing the usual party food for Christmas and our Birthday Party, :( but they have now decided it was way over the top and we do our food again. :)

So I am 'good' when I bake things for WI - Dettol spray (bought specially) on worktops, kitchen paper instead of dishcloth, much washing of hands with antibacterial soap, etc. and germ free cake at the end of it! And when we are all asked if we were hygenic I can say yes with a clear conscience - and relax until next time! (I do wash my hands before preparing food, especially if I've been gardening)

Dettol Chocolate cake anyone?

Sally at the Seaside ~~~~~~~~~~ (uk)

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You see I'm the total opposite. I think we've all got to eat a peck of

Reply to
Sally Swindells

Well, Melanie, I agree to a point. I think the anti-bacterial movement has gone overboard. I like ordinary soap. OTOH, plain old common courtesy is nice too. IMO, shoes on food surfaces is just not good manners .... same goes for purses, and to a lesser extent, hats. Shoes and purses can easily transfer e-coli, so I think it is polite to try to avoid such problems. That said, I try not to be too worried, and I do like to enjoy activities .... when on a picnic or at a fair, I dig in and enjoy the food! Your opinion is valued ... I hope mine is too. C'est la vie! PAT in VA/USA

Reply to
Pat in Virginia

Same for me. Gen

Reply to
Gen

I agree, most of the time, all these rules and products are there because common courtesy and common sense (washing your hands after using the toilet, etc) have gone out the window.

I'm one of those lucky folks who have had E-coli. I thought I was dying, albeit for only 3 days, but it was horrible. I was 23 at the time, so I can't imagine what it must be like for the very young or very old - it can be fatal!

So while there's a few things I wouldn't mess around with, I do agree with Mel and Pat that the whole "my house/life must be germ-free" has gone a bit too far. One of my roommates in University said that she was constantly ill as a child, because her Japanese mum kept the house absolutely spotless. The doctor finally told her mum to stop cleaning so much! The kid wasn't getting exposed to any bacteria, to build up her immune system. It can be taken too far...

-- Jo in Scotland

Reply to
Johanna Gibson

Yeah Melanie! I do have limits on everything, but for the most part, I agree! You've got to have the germs to create the ability to fight the germs! My kids and I hardly ever get sick, compared to my best friend who battles from November until spring time! She's a clean anti-bacterial freak, I'm just clean (most of the time!)....

Pass the scones! Especially if they are chocolate chip!

Dannielle

Reply to
Dannielle

Reply to
Taria

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