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  • Didn’t use a toilet seat cover in that public restroom? You may regret it

  • Hi guys, Crystal here for DNews. Are you afraid of contracting a terrible disease from using

  • a public restroom? How dirty are those toilets really? and how useful are those annoying

  • paper covers that always tear and then fall into the bowl after youve set them down

  • anyway?

  • Well, according to modern science, those paper covers, don’t actually do very much

  • Concern over the possibility of contracting disease from public restrooms has been around

  • for over 100 years. US patents forsanitation covers for latrine seatsdate back as far

  • as 1911 and I believe it was the late great Louis Pasteur* one of the founders of germ

  • theory who said: “Women, it is best to hover when peeing” (*Louis Pasteur definitely

  • did NOT say this).

  • We know bathrooms and kitchens are a hotbed of bacteria and other microorganisms due to

  • the abundance of moisture and nutrients. Toilet seats are known hang outs for disease agents

  • like E. coli, strep- and, staphylococcus bacteria, and the common cold but studies have shown

  • that the toilet bowl isn’t the worst offender when it comes to germs -- I will never eat

  • off of anything touched by a kitchen sponge again. Also, unless you have an open sore

  • or other breach in the protective body casing that is your skin, the chance of disease transmission

  • through toilet seat use is slim.

  • People have gotten their knickers in a bunch over the safety of toilet seats when a few

  • cases of sexually transmitted diseases cropped up in individuals who claimed that they could

  • not have contracted their infections through the usual manner. Dirty toilet seats were

  • blamed but scientists have repeatedly refuted this conclusion on the grounds that the infectious

  • agents are not viable for long outside a host body and transmission requires direct contact

  • with mucosal membranes. Actually, according to a paper in the journal of Applied and Environmental

  • Microbiology you are far more likely to get sick by breathing the aerosolized bacteria

  • in water droplets from your flush than you are from copping a squat.

  • There is a psychological factor at work here though. For some people, the act of using

  • a disposable seat cover just makes them feel safer and that’s hard to argue with. But

  • if youre looking for habits more conducive to disease prevention than using a toilet

  • seat cover wash your hands with soap and water. Yep, that’s it. That’s the best way to

  • avoid getting sick from the use of a public restroom is to wash your hands. Also when

  • possible, close the toilet seat cover before you flush. (or at least don’t stand with

  • your face over the toilet when you do).

  • So what have we learned? Toilets are not the worst offenders of disease transmission and

  • Nature has once again beat out Man in efficient engineering of sanitary barriers through the

  • evolution of skin.

  • So let us know what you think! Are toilet seat covers a wasteful american phenomenon

  • or necessary precaution? Subscribe to DNews and let us know in the comments. Also check

  • out this video where I list my five favorite things about pee:

Didn’t use a toilet seat cover in that public restroom? You may regret it

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