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  • This just in - airplanes are disgusting, disease-ridden sesspools ready to infect you and everyone

  • you love at a moment's notice. Have a great trip!

  • Hey guys Tara here for Dnews - and if you're gonna be doing some summer traveling soon

  • - then it's worth reminding yourself how gross airplanes actually are.

  • A new study from Auburn University finds that microbes can live up to 8 days inside an airplane,

  • just long enough to infect you and ruin your entire vacation.

  • A team of researchers sterilized 6 different surfaces on the inside of an airplane - and

  • then purposefully infected them with a host of microbes, ranging from E coli to MRSA,

  • the antibiotic-resistant staph infection that's estimated to occur in around 1-2% of US citizens.

  • Their goal was to see how long these microbes could survive in an airplane cabin, where

  • they're most likely to proliferate, and what the chances are of them actually infecting

  • someone. Turns out - there are a few different places

  • bacteria love to thrive - and the worst one is the airplane seat pocket. MRSA was especially

  • attracted to this area, surviving up to 168 hours - or around 8 days. E. coli, on the

  • other hand, tends to thrive in the rubber armrest, and was able to survive up to 4 days

  • there. The 4 other germiest areas of the cabin were

  • leather seats, plastic window shades, plastic tray tables, and toilet handles.

  • Despite what you might think, though - the dirtiest places aren't always the most likely

  • to transmit infections. The researchers in this study found that the most porous surfaces

  • - like the rubber arm rests - do harbor the longest-living bacteria, but also have a lower

  • risk of infection because the microbes tend to bury themselves deep into the pores of

  • the material. On the flipside, non-porous surfaces - like

  • the toilet handle - hold fewer microbes with shorter lifespans, but they're way more likely

  • to infect you than a place like the seat pocket. Other studies on airplane germs have come

  • up with some interesting conclusions. A 2007 study found that 60% of airplane tray tables,

  • tested positive for MRSA. Other experts caution against staying in aisle seats - since they

  • come into contact with more people, and are thus more likely to transmit infectious microbes.

  • Obviously keeping yourself hydrated is important too, since the low humidity on board can lower

  • our natural defense system. But the overwhelming consensus, across all studies, is to avoid

  • the airplane restrooms at all costs. You may remember a while back, there were

  • several cases of fecal bacteria discovered in the water supply of airplanes. As a result,

  • the EPA passed the Aircraft Drinking Water Rule which ensures safe and reliable drinking

  • water for passengers and crew. But germs like E Coli can still survive in airplane sinks,

  • as long as people who are infected with it, are washing their hands. And you know that

  • tiny airplane soap isn't gonna get rid of that stuff.

  • Now obviously, the ideal solution would be for airlines to adopt the same sanitation

  • strategies as places like hospitals, which use peroxide vapors and UV light to disinfect.

  • But until that happens - if you're really concerned about getting sick - your best option

  • is to avoid the bathroom altogether. And if you MUST use it - wash your hands thoroughly,

  • and then douse yourself in hand sanitizer afterwards. Maybe not your whole body, but

  • at least your hands. Hopefully this hasn't scared you out of traveling

  • this holiday weekend - but to be honest, I kind of hope it has. I'm gonna be traveling

  • myself, and I wouldn't hate having an empty seat next to me. You know, for hygiene purposes.

  • Anyway, if you ARE gonna be traveling - and you're looking for something to fill your

  • time, look no further than Audible.com. Audible is the leading provider of downloadable digital

  • audiobooks and spoken word entertainment. They've got over 100,000 titles to choose

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  • and you're good to go! If you're looking for recommendations, I suggest

  • checking out Daily Rituals: How Artists Work. It gives a peek into the everyday - and often

  • strange - habits of some of your creative minds.

  • Head over to audiblepodcast.com/dnews, and we will hook you up with a FREE audiobook

  • download of your choice just for signing up. Again that is audiblepodcast.com/dnews - to

  • get your free audiobook, and remember, every sign-up helps support Dnews.

  • As always if you guys have questions, comments, newfound phobias of airplane cabins - feel

  • free to leave them in the comments below. Otherwise, thanks for watching!

This just in - airplanes are disgusting, disease-ridden sesspools ready to infect you and everyone

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