Showing posts with label water-borne bacteria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water-borne bacteria. Show all posts

Friday, February 5, 2010

The Five Second Rule


 Click on the chart above to enlarge it.

The 5-Second Rule (or the 3 second rule) is one of the most popular beliefs known anywhere and everywhere.

The "rule" states that once food that has fallen on the floor is still safe to eat if you pick it up within five seconds.

As with most things however, the rule isn't as simple as may appear at first glance.

Here is a simple fact you probably already know, the 5-second rule really isn't a rule at all.

The truth is, food dropped on the floor can just a dangerous risky to eat regardless of the five seconds.
As you will see in the video, some foods are riskier than others.

Bacteria, and not very nice ones, are everywhere

No matter how clean you are, there is bacteria on every surface of every home.

For example, your cutting board has 200 times more bacteria than your toilet.
Your sink is an E.Coli paradise, and the dish sponge, yikes, you don't even want to know.

So, here are a few rules to remember:
1. A clean-looking floor doesn't mean it's really clean.
2. Faster is always better, but fast may not always be fast enough.
3. Bacteria can attach to your food as soon as it hits the floor. That means food left on the floor for an instant can get contaminated. And foods with wet surfaces, can pick up bacteria easily.
4. When in doubt, trash it.

So, the bottom line results are depressing.
Bacteria such as Salmonella which causes diarrhea and vomiting can survive for weeks on carpet, wood and tiles and can contaminate food within a few seconds of contact.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Miami hotel moves 300 guests due to water-borne bacteria


The EPIC Hotel, an upscale hotel, opened just a year ago in downtown Miami has moved 300 guests after a bacteria in its water is suspected in one death and two hospitalizations.
One European guest died in September and two others were sent to the hospital in November and December.The Miami-Dade County health department said the problem at the EPIC hotel was the bacteria Legionella pneumophila, which causes Legionnaires' disease.
Authorities said they believed the installation of a powerful water filter at the hotel, which was to remove chlorine from tap water, allowed the bacteria to grow in the water system.

The health department is calling an it an outbreak
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention describes the cause of the disease:"People get Legionnaires' disease when they breathe in a mist or vapor that has been contaminated with the bacteria."
There may have been contamination, because chlorine levels at Epic are too low, said county health experts.
Still, the hotel has not been confirmed as the source of the disease.
Bruce Rubin, a spokesman for Epic, issued a statement that read in part: "The EPIC Hotel has voluntarily partnered with the Miami-Dade Health Department to notify guests and staff of the possible presence of bacteria in its water system."
"EPIC is working towards a quick and thorough resolution to the water issue, and looks forward to welcoming its guests back as soon as possible."