It always seemed like a disaster waiting to happen: An oral care appliance intended for use near and in running water, but with a 120-volt electric cord permanently attached. Hadn't we been warned since birth about the dangers of radios and other electrical devices near bathroom sinks and tubs? But then, maybe the added element of danger was what made it appealing, especially since it had received so many endorsements by the practice. If you survived using it, there was always tomorrow. That is, IF you weren't forbidden from buying one by a sensible spouse or cautious parents. "Not in THIS bathroom!" was a common protest.
You once saw them on display at your local druggist because, after all, they were distributed in the Western Hemisphere by a leading pharmaceutical firm, the very company that made the vitamins your mother insisted you wash down with your first swig of orange juice every morning. Yet, you bought another brand, a seemingly safer one because it was rechargeable. And when it finally wore out, you went to the nearest Target for a new one, only to find brands like Oral B, SoniCare and those battery-operated mouth buzzers offered by toothpaste makers like Crest and Colgate. Gone were General Electric, Sunbeam and everyone else who got into the act. That electric-corded nightmare machine was only a memory. Surely, something so patently dangerous in appearance must have faded into the mists of time.
Or had it?
P.S.: The cord is STILL attached but the plug has been replaced by a transformer.</b>
You once saw them on display at your local druggist because, after all, they were distributed in the Western Hemisphere by a leading pharmaceutical firm, the very company that made the vitamins your mother insisted you wash down with your first swig of orange juice every morning. Yet, you bought another brand, a seemingly safer one because it was rechargeable. And when it finally wore out, you went to the nearest Target for a new one, only to find brands like Oral B, SoniCare and those battery-operated mouth buzzers offered by toothpaste makers like Crest and Colgate. Gone were General Electric, Sunbeam and everyone else who got into the act. That electric-corded nightmare machine was only a memory. Surely, something so patently dangerous in appearance must have faded into the mists of time.
Or had it?
P.S.: The cord is STILL attached but the plug has been replaced by a transformer.</b>