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A Perspective on Antibacterials — Please Don't Routinely Use Pesticides

HIV AIDS, contagious tuberculosis, hepatitis B and other scary diseases and their terrible effect have been reported by news sources everywhere. These news stories have warned us, or at least reminded us, that disease-causing germs — bacterial, viral or otherwise — are seemingly lurking everywhere.

 

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It makes parents uneasy. Household cleaning takes on an additional sense of urgency as mothers seek to protect their family and especially their children from illness.

 

Cleaning product manufacturers have rolled out antibacterial cleaners and soaps as quickly as you can say bird flu pandemic.

 

I am concerned that using antibacterial products on germs is akin to poisoning mice. Obviously mice are bigger, but the idea is the same. The reason antibacterial products kill things is because they are pesticides!

 

Q. Are antibacterial-containing products (soaps, household cleaners, etc.) better for preventing the spread of infection? Does their use add to the problem of resistance?

 

A. An essential part of preventing the spread of infection in the community and at home is proper hygiene. This includes hand-washing and cleaning shared items and surfaces. Antibacterial-containing products have not been proven to prevent the spread of infection better than products that do not contain antibacterial chemicals.

 

Although a link between antibacterial chemicals used in personal cleaning products and bacterial resistance has been shown in in vitro studies, no human health consequence has been demonstrated. More studies examining resistance issues related to these products are needed.

 

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Nonprescription Drugs Advisory Committee voted unanimously on October 20, 2005 that there was a lack of evidence supporting the benefit of consumer products including handwashes, bodywashes, etc. containing antibacterial additives over similar products not containing antibacterial additives.
Source: CDC

Here’s what we now know:

  1. Many germs (bacteria, viruses, fungi, etc.) need a food supply, warmth and moisture to survive. Simply cleaning with soap and water removes a significant number of them. The very act of cleaning also can result in a clean and dry surface hostile to their growth.
  2. Antibacterial products do not kill viruses, only bacteria.
  3. Because a home is not a sterile environment, even if an antibacterial cleaner is used, germs start growing again almost immediately.
  4. Antibacterial products (poisons) go down the drain and eventually enter the ecosytem. Almost no one thinks that is a good thing.

Antibacterial soaps are no better than plain soap in preventing infectious disease, according to a recent study from Columbia University. Researchers found that there is virtually no difference in the rate of symptoms between those using antibacterial products and those who do not. Since 2000, the American Medical Association (AMA) has been advising the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to monitor and possibly regulate the home use of antibacterials. Even the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends using plain old soap and traditional cleaning agents and not ones with antibacterial properties. In Oct. 2005 the FDA brought the issue of antibacterials to an outside committee of experts, to examine whether the agency needs to limit their use by consumers.

 

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the position or perspective of Housekeeping Channel LLC.

A Perspective on Antibacterials — Please Don't Routinely Use Pesticides:  Created on June 18th, 2006.  Last Modified on January 21st, 2014

 

About Jeff Campbell

Jeff Campbell

 

 

 

 

 

Jeff Campbell is widely regarded as one of America's leading home cleaning experts. He has appeared regularly on HGTV, and his books have been condensed in Reader's Digest and Family Circle, and reviewed in USA Today, the National Enquirer, The Christian Science Monitor and other publications. Jeff's Speed Cleaning methods have created millions of leisure hours for hundreds of thousands of busy people — and all through helping people clean smarter, not harder. For more information, visit TheCleanTeam.