Results of a new global study and survey reveal that American families could be doing more to help protect themselves and their children from dangerous germs at home. The findings released by the Hygiene Council, as part of an effort to educate the public on the importance of hygiene, indicate that Americans’ current kitchen cleaning habits are not effectively helping to safeguard their families from illness-causing germs and bacteria.
Here’s a look at where the Hygiene Council found germs stacking up in the kitchen:
| Forty-six percent of kitchen sinks around the world harbor high levels of potentially dangerous bacteria.¹ | |
| The kitchen sink was found to host more germs than the bathroom sink, the refrigerator door handle or even the toys our toddlers chew on.² |
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| Percentage of kitchen sinks that harbor high levels of potentially dangerous bacteria, by country.³ | |
| Investigators swabbing for bacteria in kitchen sinks around the world found unsatisfactory or heavily contaminated levels of bacteria, including E. coli and pseudomonas, indicating fecal contamination and poor levels of cleaning.¹¹ | ![]() |
| Eighty-nine percent of kitchen cloths and sponges¹² around the world harbor unsatisfactory or worse levels of disease-causing bacteria.¹³ | |
| Among Americans who reported changing their cloth or sponge once a week, 80% still had unsatisfactory or worse levels of bacteria on their cloth or sponge.²¹ | ![]() |
| Percentage of kitchen cloths and sponges that failed the hygiene test, by country.²² | |
| In the U.S., 25% of kitchen cloths and sponges that appeared new or visibly clean still harbored unsatisfactory or heavily contaminated levels of bacteria.²³ | ![]() |
To help protect your family, the Hygiene Council recommends following these simple hygiene routines at home:
The Hygiene Council recommendations are consistent and in support of recommendations made by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in their Ounce of Prevention materials (www.cdc.gov/ounceofprevention). For more information about the Hygiene Council and tips on how to help protect your family from germs at home, visit www.hygienecouncil.com/us.
¹Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study Report 2008, page 48.
²Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study Report 2008, page 48.
³Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study Report 2008, page 42.
¹¹Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study Report 2008, page 60.
¹²Kitchen cloths and sponges were swabbed interchangeably based on country norms. Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study Report 2008.
¹³Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study Report 2008, page 48.
²¹Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study – Questionnaire of home study participants.
²²Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study Report 2008, page 52.
²³Hygiene Audit Systems Global Hygiene Study Report 2008, Appendix Tables of Results, page A17.
³¹2008 International Home Hygiene Survey, Conducted March – May 2008.
³²Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Ounce of Prevention Initiative
³³Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Ounce of Prevention Initiative
¹¹¹Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Ounce of Prevention Initiative