General Chat
Welcome to the Genes Reunited community boards!
- The Genes Reunited community is made up of millions of people with similar interests. Discover your family history and make life long friends along the way.
- You will find a close knit but welcoming group of keen genealogists all prepared to offer advice and help to new members.
- And it's not all serious business. The boards are often a place to relax and be entertained by all kinds of subjects.
- The Genes community will go out of their way to help you, so don’t be shy about asking for help.
Quick Search
Single word search
Icons
- New posts
- No new posts
- Thread closed
- Stickied, new posts
- Stickied, no new posts
do you wash your hands when going to the loo??
| Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Sally Moonchild | Report | 23 May 2006 22:44 |
|
Always. I am really surprised at some 'ladies' who are smartly dressed, who do not....dirty people... |
|||
|
valium | Report | 23 May 2006 22:58 |
|
I work on a bar and diner I always wash mine after i come out of the loo and when i go on to the dept i am working on. Val xxx |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
Val wish I'd never started | Report | 23 May 2006 23:07 |
|
you often find people who are always having tummy troubles blame the Restaurant food when really they dont wash their own hands.We took some people on Holiday, Big mistake he did not wash his hands after anything even picked his Nose in front of us, I ended up losing weight because I would not eat anything in the house. Maybe we could all do with a friend like that.!!!!! |
|||
|
Len of the Chilterns | Report | 23 May 2006 23:37 |
|
I don't wash my hands going to the loo (well, sometimes, if I've been gardening) but always when I come out. I saw a TV documentary some time ago and they put CCTV in the gents at Smithfield meat market. 180 meat porters used it in a day and only two washed afterwards. A test was done in a pub on the washing-up water where they 'rinsed' the glasses before standing them on a cloth to drain before re-use. The bacteria count (of the sort found in faeces) was colossal, due to deposits by customers not washing after using the toilets, the contamination in the washing-up water becoming quite concetrated. len |
|||
|
Unknown | Report | 23 May 2006 23:45 |
|
Always,,,,,,,having a younge child u become obsessed..LOL. |
|||
|
Len of the Chilterns | Report | 23 May 2006 23:45 |
|
Few people realise how contaminated handles on flush toilets become, also door knobs. If one uses a public toilet, the effects of washing can be offset by using the door handle to get out of the place. len |
|||
|
Purple **^*Sparkly*^** Diamond | Report | 24 May 2006 00:56 |
|
Always wash my hands and try not to use the hand driers - apparently lots of them work by pulling in air from close by and if they are near the toilets the air they pull in is contaminated by airborne bacteria from the loo. I always try to open the main door at the exit after I have washed with my little finger so as not to contaminate the rest of my hand with which I am more likely to touch my mouth, eyes etc. |
|||
|
Sue | Report | 24 May 2006 15:01 |
|
Lunar, so pleased you mentioned the gloves that should be used by ALL phlebotomists these days. If using new gloves for each patient handwashing isn't such an issue. There are a lot of 'older' phlebs around who trained before gloves were deemed necessary, and being honest, it's difficult to get the touch right when you didn't learn that way to start with. So they should always visibly hand wash between patients, and you have to right to mention it if at all worried. Back to the after the loo question, at work I always wash before and after, but the before ususally happens as we leave the room we are working in. Some public toilets give the impression that you would be cleaner just walking out, bypassing the sinks altogether! Suex |
|||
|
Just Joycexx | Report | 24 May 2006 15:26 |
|
iwash mine after iv been joycexx |
|||
|
♫ Penny € | Report | 24 May 2006 16:13 |
|
what about the taps? Touch them with your dirty hands then touch them with your clean hand which is then dirty!!!! |
|||
|
Pat | Report | 24 May 2006 16:22 |
|
Always . Just comes as second nature. Pat |
|||
|
Glenys the Menace! | Report | 24 May 2006 16:55 |
|
There's a girl at work - a smashing girl - who very quickly shoves her hands under the cold water tap after coming out of the cubicle, thereby only just moistening them. No soap. At home, every now and then, she makes a Banoffee Pie for us to tuck into, but due to the above I (along with other females in the office) have never tried it. x P.S. I wash mine, as do the whole family. |
|||
|
Dizzy Lizzy 205090 | Report | 24 May 2006 17:10 |
|
I am very fussy about hand hygiene, to the extent that I carry a bottle of alcohol cleansing gel in my handbag at all times, because some public loo sinks are so manky. I have taught my children that washing means soap AND water, as just danging your fingers unfer the tap merely makes them wet, it does not make them clean. Liz |
|||
|
Unknown | Report | 24 May 2006 17:34 |
|
I'm a washer not a walker lol!! and I've got bacterial gel too |
|||