TV Remote, Bedside Lamp Switch Among Most
Contaminated Hotel Room Surfaces
June
17, 2012 -- One of the most contaminated things you're likely to encounter in a
hotel room may surprise you. It's not the bed or even the door handle. It's the
TV remote control.
That,
and bedside lamp switches, are among the most contaminated surfaces in hotel
rooms, a new study shows. Researchers found high levels of fecal bacteria and
other potentially harmful bacteria on these commonly used items.
The
sponges and mops hotel housekeepers use to clean hotel rooms were also on the
list. That could pose a risk for cross-contamination from room to room.
The
researchers say their findings may help hotels develop more effective ways to
target the items most likely to be contaminated with bacteria that could pose a
health risk to their guests.
"Hoteliers
have an obligation to provide their guests a safe and secure environment,"
researcher Katie Kirsch, an undergraduate student at the University of Houston,
says in a news release.
"Currently,
housekeepers clean 14-16 rooms per 8-hour shift, spending approximately 30
minutes on each room," Kirsch says. "Identifying high-risk items within
a hotel room would allow housekeeping managers to strategically design cleaning
practices and allocate time to efficiently reduce the potential health risks
posed by microbial contamination in hotel rooms."
Where Harmful Bacteria Hide in Hotel Rooms
In the
study, presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for
Microbiology, researchers sampled bacteria levels of 19 common surfaces in nine
different hotel rooms in Texas, South Carolina, and Indiana.
They
then compared contamination levels of bacteria, such as fecal and aerobic
bacteria, in each of the samples.
Overall,
researchers found fecal bacteria present on 81% of the samples.
Not
surprisingly, some of the most contaminated samples came from the toilet and
bathroom sink.
But the
study also showed high levels of contamination on several high-contact items,
such as TV remotes, telephones, carpets, and bedside lamp switches.
The
least contaminated surface tested was the headboard.
The
study also showed several items taken from hotel housekeepers' carts, including
sponges and mops, had high levels of both types of bacteria.
Although
this was a small study, researchers say the results suggest current cleaning
methods used to clean hotel rooms may be ineffective and possibly increase the
risk of spreading disease-causing germs from room to room.
“The
current validation method for hotel room cleanliness is a visual assessment,
which has been shown to be ineffective in measuring levels of sanitation,” says
Kirsch.
"The
information derived from this study could aid hotels in adopting a proactive
approach for reducing potential hazards from contact with surfaces within hotel
rooms and provide a basis for the development of more effective and efficient
housekeeping practices," Kirsch says.
These
findings were presented at a medical conference. They should be considered
preliminary, as they have not yet undergone the "peer review"
process, in which outside experts scrutinize the data prior to publication in a
medical journal.
By Jennifer Warner
WebMD Health News
WebMD Health News
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