Futurity

How to do your laundry and not get sick

Does your laundry carry germs that can make you sick? Experts dig into how you can safely tackle the dirty job.
Face masks and a child's stuffed rabbit hang on a clothes line

Doing the laundry is one of the way we maintain a clean and healthy household, but with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and cold and flu season right around the corner, is a standard wash enough?

The soiled laundry in our hampers can be contaminated with all sorts of germs, including bodily fluids and food debris, which can be a source of pathogenic bacteria, fungi, and viruses.

Environmental microbiologists and public health researchers at the University of Arizona recently reviewed what we know and the science surrounding laundry best practices.

“We really wanted to approach it analytically, using a quantitative microbial risk management approach,” says Charles Gerba, an environmental microbiologist in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. “What’s the process and what’s really important? There really hasn’t been a lot of scientific guidelines or best practices put together for how to safely tackle household laundry.”

“Most studies on how laundry practices kill germs are based on European wash conditions where higher water temperatures and longer wash cycles are common. Hot water washes, however, use a lot of energy and can damage many of today’s fabrics,” says Kelly Reynolds, professor and chair of the department of community, environment, and policy at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. “We were interested in evaluating whether the more common North American practice of using cold or warm water temperatures was sufficient.”

Here, Reynolds and Gerba sort through a laundry list of questions, including how long germs can survive on garments and the best safe handling procedures:

The post How to do your laundry and not get sick appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity4 min read
Mom’s Immune Status Changes With How She Feeds Baby
The immune status of postpartum mothers shifts with how she feeds her baby, a new study finds. According to the paper published in the journal Scientific Reports, certain inflammatory proteins—substances that are secreted as part of an immune respons
Futurity3 min read
How Childhood Trauma Affects Adults Later
Some people assume we forget or outgrow trauma. But the truth is, if someone experiences trauma as a child, it can lead to physical and mental struggles that affect their entire life. Here, Thomas O’Connor, director of the Wynne Center for Family Res
Futurity4 min read
Why Parrotlets Adopt (or Kill) Their Rivals’ Babies
Competition over love and real estate drives two extreme behaviors in green-rumped parrotlets, a new study finds—either caring for or killing one another’s babies. Infanticide and adoption in the animal kingdom have long puzzled scientists. While bot

Related Books & Audiobooks