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Women's Desks Only LOOK Cleaner...

Trisha  | Posted on Feb 15 2007 10:22 AM | Comments on 2 comments

Women's desks have up to 4 times more bacteria than men's

Psshh...for the record, I sanitize my desk once a week so I am in the clear here. For the rest of you, you may want to tune in.

For your reading pleasure...

TUCSON, Ariz. - Your office desk harbors far more bacteria than your workplace restroom, and if you're a woman, chances are your workspace has more germs than your male co-workers', a new research report shows.

Women have three to four times the number of bacteria in, on and around their desks, phones, computers, keyboards, drawers and personal items as men do, the study by University of Arizona professor Charles Gerba showed. Gerba, a professor of soil, water and environmental sciences, tested more than 100 offices on the UA campus and in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oregon and Washington, D.C. The $40,000 study was commissioned by the Clorox Co.

"I thought for sure men would be germier," Gerba said. "But women have more interactions with small children and keep food in their desks. The other problem is makeup."

Tidy doesn't mean clean
Don't get Gerba wrong: Women's desks typically looked cleaner. But the knickknacks are more abundant, and cosmetics and hand lotions make prime germ-transfer agents, Gerba said. Makeup cases also make for fine germ homes, along with phones, purses and desk drawers.

Food in desk drawers also harbors lots of microorganisms, and it is more abundant among female office workers. Gerba found 75 percent of women had munchies in their desks.

"I was really surprised how much food there was in a woman's desk," he said. "If there's ever a famine, that's the first place I'll look for food."

Back pocket an ‘incubator for bacteria’
The news isn't all negative for the fairer sex.

Gerba found the worst overall office germ offender is men's wallets.

"It's in your back pocket where it's nice and warm, it's a great incubator for bacteria," Gerba said.

Another hot spot for bacteria in men's offices: the personal digital assistant.

"Men tend to play with their Palm Pilots more," Gerba said. "I think they're playing video games or something."

The average office desktop has 400 times more bacteria than the average office toilet seat, Gerba said.

Gerba said using a hand sanitizer and using a disinfectant on office surfaces helps, with 25 percent fewer bacteria found on surfaces that were regularly disinfected. Once-a-day use should be sufficient.

"You don't have to go crazy with it, but with the key areas, desktops, phones and keyboards probably need to be disinfected once in a while," he said.

  fact file How Germs Spread
Understanding how germs spread is vital to preventing infection. There are seven possible ways for the transmission of bacteria and viruses to take place. Click on a category to learn more.
Direct contact
This mode of transmission involves physical contact and generally takes place through shaking hands, touching someone, kissing or sexual activity. Sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV, syphilis and chlamydia are spread this way.
Source: “The Secret Life of Germs” by Dr. Philip M. Tierno (Atria Books, 2001) Print this

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. Debbie said on 2/15/2007 11:02 AM

    Hmm, I never thought of it like that. Hand lotion too....I guess I better start cleaning/sanitizing more often.

  2. Trisha said on 2/15/2007 11:43 AM

    Sanitize once a week ladies...it takes a mere 3 minutes, but may save you from illness.

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