Cruise ship bathroom cleanliness questioned
Relevant offers
Going on a cruise? To cut your risk of getting sick while sailing the high seas, avoid using the ship's public bathrooms.
Researchers have found that only 37 percent of 273 randomly selected public restrooms on cruise ships that were checked on 1546 occasions were cleaned at least daily, with the toilet seat the best cleaned of six evaluated objects.
On 275 occasions no objects in a restroom were cleaned for at least 24 hours with baby changing tables found to be the least thoroughly cleaned object.
Researcher Philip Carling, of Carney Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, said public toilet seats and flush devices, stall handholds and door handles, inner restroom door handles, and baby changing tables "on most, but not all, cruise ships" are not being cleaned and disinfected thoroughly.
"There was a substantial potential for washed hands to become contaminated while the passenger was exiting the restroom, given that only 35 percent of restroom exit knobs or pulls were cleaned daily," Carling said in a statement.
"Only disinfection cleaning by cruise ship staff can reasonably be expected to mitigate these risks."
Lack of disinfection, he and colleagues from the Cambridge Health Alliance and Tufts University School of Medicine, noted in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, may significantly increase risk for illness, and particularly for the severe diarrhoea and vomiting caused by highly contagious norovirus.
Carling told Reuters Health that cruise passengers should minimise public restroom use, wash hands with soap and water rather than alcohol-based hand rubs, and be aware of the disease transmission potential from all publicly touched surfaces.
For the study, Carling's group enlisted 46 health professionals to check 273 randomly selected public restrooms daily during cruises between July 2005 and August 2008.
The ships most originated from US ports and 82 percent from the five largest cruise lines.
Armed with handheld ultraviolet lights to pick up florescent traces of a transparent, but easily cleanable solution they had previously sprayed on surfaces, the cleaning spies identified surfaces left uncleaned for 24 hours.
Toilet seats were the best-cleaned object. Of the 2010 toilet seats evaluated, 50 percent had been cleaned. They found 42 percent of toilet flush devices, 37 percent of toilet stall doors, and 31 percent of stall handhold bars had been cleaned. Only 35 percent of interior bathroom door handles and 29 percent of baby changing tables had been cleaned.
Post-outbreak cleaning and disinfection practices on cruise ships, although important, are not enough, the researchers say.
Increased efforts to prevent outbreaks with better disinfection practices are clearly needed.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Another near-death Laos tube ride
Bag a bargain in the United States
Kiwis' epic skateboarding adventure
Record arrivals from WLG-QTN link
Australia costs more than New York
Wellington out to woo Australians
Aerial battles thrill Marlborough
Inter-island ferry a Kiwiana classic
Fay group would meet Chinese undertakings
Repairs force disabled red-zoner to sleep outdoors
Wellington earthquake fear: No way in or out
Ex-Pike River boss may testify over criticisms
Renewed hope in Hobsonville RSA attack case
Fear of dangerous rift from wealth gap
Trevor Mallard: I'm no ticket scalper
Black Caps to put Proteas in a spin
Lessons learned in horror year: Colin Slade
Abercrombie stars as Breakers shoot down Hawks
Dead pile up after Honduras prison blaze
Schoolgirl sex video man guilty
Sir Richard Taylor named New Zealander of the Year
Dazzling Adele silences critics
Kiwis in cruise ship cocaine bust
Sonny Bill Williams finds rugby boring: mate
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Mallard offers ticket cash back
No radiation leak on plane, says Fire Service
Would you use KLM's 'meet and seat' service to meet like-minded passengers?


