Hotels are full of germs

gravitas

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lars_from_mars said:
Not a big surprise really.
Hotel rooms are nothing more then petri dishes with pay per view movies.

I'm a fairly neat and clean person by nature and have never liked locker rooms, swimming pools or other public areas where you're exposed to other people's personal castings. Unfortunately I travel a lot with work and that means airplanes, taxi cabs and hotel rooms. Fairly early on that I learned to either ignore the "germs" or go all howard hughs and start walking around with kleenex boxes on my feet and keeping my piss in mason jars. Since I believe that pee is for flushing I just decided to ignore the fact that in hotels bed covers, chairs and remote controls are just covered in filth.
 

D.W.B

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I recently watched an episode of Cold Case Files on A&E about a serial killer in the midwestern US that was killing motel cleaning ladies.

What this guy would do is grab a cleaning lady and drag her into one of the rooms to rape and kill her.

In the process of trying to catch this douche bag the police took a bedspread out of one of the rooms used and did a dna test on it.

Guess what,the cops lifted 23 different dna samples (loads) off the bedspread

I cringe at the thought of how many times i inhaled pizza and watched tv while beached on the bed of some motel.
 

wolverine

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Wow, this is startling medical news on par with smoking being bad for you. :rolleyes:

How many of you have stayed in a hotel in a strange city and squirted your jism all over the bedsheets whilst watching the pay-per-porn or having an SP over for an hour?
 

JustAGuy

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Yowser!!! Breaking news: hotel rooms are germ factories! Thanks for the heads up. In return, I feel obliged to offer another valuable tidbit of information for those who may not be aware of it. Rabid skunks are dangerous!! ;)
 

gravitas

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wolverine said:
How many of you have stayed in a hotel in a strange city and squirted your jism all over the bedsheets whilst watching the pay-per-porn or having an SP over for an hour?
Exactly! Thats why when I travel as much as I like the space of a king bed I'll take two queens or doubles.....one for fucking that I don't care if it gets all funked up and one for sleeping that I keep nice and clean :)
 

lars_from_mars

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FuZzYknUckLeS said:
How 'bout posting the article.
Weird. Works for me and I'm not a member. Anyways, here it is:

Study: Hotel Rooms Have Unseen Guests

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE
AP Medical Writer
Published September 29, 2006, 9:58 PM CDT


SAN FRANCISCO -- Hotel guests leave behind more than just socks and old paperbacks: A new study found viruses on TV remotes, light switches and even hotel pens after cold sufferers checked out.

The germ testing was done before the rooms were cleaned, so it likely overstates the risks that most travelers would face. Nevertheless, it shows the potential hazards if a hotel's turnaround amounts to little more than changing the sheets and wiping out the tub.

"You sure hope the cleaning people were good," said Dr. Owen Hendley, the University of Virginia pediatrician who presented results of the study Friday at a meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.

Besides hotel hazards, the findings point out things that people may not think to clean in their homes when someone has a cold.

"We know that viruses can survive on surfaces for a long time -- more than four days," said Dr. Birgit Winther, an ear, nose and throat specialist at the university who led the study.

Its aim was to test the survival of rhinoviruses, which cause about half of all colds, especially in children.

Researchers had 15 people with lab-confirmed rhinovirus colds spend a night in individual rooms at a nearby hotel and, after they checked out, tested 10 items they said they had touched. About one-third of the objects were contaminated with rhinovirus.

"We were surprised to find so many," Winther said.

Virus was found on 7 out of 14 door handles and 6 of 14 pens. Six out of 15 light switches, TV remotes and faucets tested positive, as did 5 of 15 phones. Shower curtains, coffee makers and alarm clocks also harbored viruses.

Surprisingly, virus turned up on only one of the 10 toilet handles tested.

Experts did not test items like bedspreads because cloth dries out germs, making them far less likely to survive than they do on smooth or moist surfaces.

Several months later, 5 of the 15 participants were asked to return to the hotel and visit rooms where certain items had been deliberately contaminated with their own mucus, which had been frozen previously when they had their colds.

Because they had developed immunity to these germs, doctors could study how easily they picked them up without putting them at risk of getting sick again.

Each volunteer visited two rooms and their hands were tested afterward for viruses. Results were positive on 60 percent of contacts in rooms where mucus had dried for at least an hour, and on 33 percent of those in rooms where mucus had dried overnight.

The study was sponsored by Reckitt-Benckiser Inc., makers of Lysol, but did not test any products. Doctors with no ties to the company designed the study to lay the groundwork for future research on germs and ways to get rid of them.

Some in the hotel industry say they have strict policies on how to disinfect rooms between guests.

"We do wipe everything down, from the remote control to the telephone," said Michelle Pike, corporate director of housekeeping for Hilton brand hotels, which has 1,900 hotels around the world. Most of them are independently operated but the chain does have rules for disinfection, she said.

Hilton, like many hotels, has taken steps to make common items easier to clean, like encasing phone books in plastic and replacing bedspreads with duvet covers than can be washed between each guest, she said.

And if germs are lingering on surfaces in hotel rooms, "you can be damn sure it's more likely to happen at home," Hendley said.

To wipe down home surfaces, doorknobs and light switches, "standard household cleaners will be adequate," said Dr. Frederick Hayden, a University of Virginia infectious diseases specialist who had no role in this study but has consulted extensively with companies developing viral vaccines and treatments.

Dr. Stuart Levy, a Tufts University physician who heads the Alliance for Prudent Antibiotic Use, advocates lots of hand washing and not going overboard trying to de-bug your home.

"How clean do you need to be? You don't go through with a blowtorch," he said.
 

visiting

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Oct 23, 2005
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A few years ago there was a study done at the U of Calgary, (I think) where it was reported that when they tested the men's shower floor for germs, it had tones of germs, and then they tested the toilet seat, among other things to compare. Well to show how many germs there was on the shower floor, the researcher, said he would eat of the toilet seat, but would not walk on the shower room floor, without footwear.
 

georgebushmoron

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visiting said:
A few years ago there was a study done at the U of Calgary, (I think) where it was reported that when they tested the men's shower floor for germs, it had tones of germs, and then they tested the toilet seat, among other things to compare. Well to show how many germs there was on the shower floor, the researcher, said he would eat of the toilet seat, but would not walk on the shower room floor, without footwear.
That's why I hate public swimming pools, especially the shower/change areas. I can't believe I see people barefoot... with all the pubes and other shit on the floor. It almost makes me rather lick a stinky pussy instead, its so disgusting.
 

shapeshifter

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D.W.B said:
I recently watched an episode of Cold Case Files on A&E about a serial killer in the midwestern US that was killing motel cleaning ladies.

What this guy would do is grab a cleaning lady and drag her into one of the rooms to rape and kill her.

In the process of trying to catch this douche bag the police took a bedspread out of one of the rooms used and did a dna test on it.

Guess what,the cops lifted 23 different dna samples (loads) off the bedspread

I cringe at the thought of how many times i inhaled pizza and watched tv while beached on the bed of some motel.
Even more fucked up was the motel room that 4 different occupants had complained about a stench and something like 3 weeks later they found a local ho dead under the bed, how fucking lazy were the housekeepers at that place :confused:

I think it's safe to assume they didnt vacuum under their furniture / beds very often! :mad:
 

hornyitalian06

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Tralalalalalala

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And that's why you should always bring your own bedding to hotels. Even though then you have to throw the bedding out anyway because it touched the hotel matress, ick.
 
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