Perhaps for domestic use, and certainly in the USA that might prove true, but certainly isn't across the board.
In Europe and or commercial/institutional use state of the art for some time now has been activated oxygen bleaching systems that will deliver same sanitation/disinfecting properties of chlorine bleach, but without any of the drawbacks.
https://www.rapidcleannewengland.com.au/products/ecolab-eltra-20kg/
Have mentioned this previously; peracetic acid formed by bleach activator (TAED usually) and oxygen bleach (sodium perborate or percarbonate), and or stand alone solution is a powerful disinfectant, fungicide, etc.... Breweries, poultry plants and others use peracetic acid to disinfect without the cons of using chlorine based products.
https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Peracetic-acid
https://www.cdc.gov/infectioncontrol/guidelines/disinfection/sterilization/peracetic-acid.html
http://www.laundryandcleaningnews.com/news/newsclarifying-the-use-of-peracetic-acid-4308754
Then of course there are the quat based laundry sanitizers used in final rinse. Persil, Dettol, Lysol among other brand names.
Chlorine bleach remains the standard or go to option (at least in United States) because it is cheap, easily accessible and the old reliable standby that most are familiar with, and or can wrap their heads around.
In Europe and or commercial/institutional use state of the art for some time now has been activated oxygen bleaching systems that will deliver same sanitation/disinfecting properties of chlorine bleach, but without any of the drawbacks.
https://www.rapidcleannewengland.com.au/products/ecolab-eltra-20kg/
Have mentioned this previously; peracetic acid formed by bleach activator (TAED usually) and oxygen bleach (sodium perborate or percarbonate), and or stand alone solution is a powerful disinfectant, fungicide, etc.... Breweries, poultry plants and others use peracetic acid to disinfect without the cons of using chlorine based products.
https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Peracetic-acid
https://www.cdc.gov/infectioncontrol/guidelines/disinfection/sterilization/peracetic-acid.html
http://www.laundryandcleaningnews.com/news/newsclarifying-the-use-of-peracetic-acid-4308754
Then of course there are the quat based laundry sanitizers used in final rinse. Persil, Dettol, Lysol among other brand names.
Chlorine bleach remains the standard or go to option (at least in United States) because it is cheap, easily accessible and the old reliable standby that most are familiar with, and or can wrap their heads around.