Awhile ago some bright blub went around doing swab and cultures of various household areas/appliances, and published his results. Apparently a large number of washing machines were found to contain high levels of bacteria including E Coli.
E Coli is a common enough bacteria, it is found in human waste thus is present almost every where hands touch in some sort of numbers, given one must use one's hands to,well you know. Fecal matter/E Coli also is found on items used to bath and dry "down there", as well as undergarments, bedding and such. Besides fecal matter it is also spread when one passes wind.
Unless one is already very ill, and or suffers from a weak immune system, E Coli in most cases is not going to cause much harm. Though there are some very nasty strains out there, those were not the ones found in this test. However the publication of the study was enough to send the media harping on about "dirty" washing machines, and how they could "spread" disease. Even Colorx now gets in on the act with commercials reminding consumers that just because laundry looks clean, does not mean it is free of germs.
Lots of people make comparisons with commerical laundries and their methods, however commercial laundries handle lots of laundry from various sources. They do not know who has what, therefore must treat everything as suspect since all that laundry is done together in large loads. Home laundry is quite another matter. Housewives/mothers have long been advised and indeed have separated laundry from sickrooms, nursery or other suspect wash from the general laundry, and or added methods to cope with any potential disease in their homes. Much of this is not necessary anymore as people tend to go to hospital when they are very ill with contagious disease.
L.
E Coli is a common enough bacteria, it is found in human waste thus is present almost every where hands touch in some sort of numbers, given one must use one's hands to,well you know. Fecal matter/E Coli also is found on items used to bath and dry "down there", as well as undergarments, bedding and such. Besides fecal matter it is also spread when one passes wind.
Unless one is already very ill, and or suffers from a weak immune system, E Coli in most cases is not going to cause much harm. Though there are some very nasty strains out there, those were not the ones found in this test. However the publication of the study was enough to send the media harping on about "dirty" washing machines, and how they could "spread" disease. Even Colorx now gets in on the act with commercials reminding consumers that just because laundry looks clean, does not mean it is free of germs.
Lots of people make comparisons with commerical laundries and their methods, however commercial laundries handle lots of laundry from various sources. They do not know who has what, therefore must treat everything as suspect since all that laundry is done together in large loads. Home laundry is quite another matter. Housewives/mothers have long been advised and indeed have separated laundry from sickrooms, nursery or other suspect wash from the general laundry, and or added methods to cope with any potential disease in their homes. Much of this is not necessary anymore as people tend to go to hospital when they are very ill with contagious disease.
L.