Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Reusable Shopping Bags - Do you wash?


I found an interesting article in the Sun Sentential I thought I would share:

Researchers at the University of Arizona and Loma Linda University queried shoppers headed into grocery stores in California and Arizona, asking them if they wash those reusable bags. The researchers were likely met with a lot of blank looks. Most shoppers -- 97 percent, in fact -- reported they do not regularly, if ever, wash the bags.


Further, three-fourths acknowledged they don't use separate bags for meats and for vegetables, and about a third said they used the bags for, well, all sorts of things (storing snacks, toting books). You can see where this is going.

The researchers tested 84 of the bags for bacteria. They found whopping amounts in all but one bag, and conform bacteria (suggesting raw-meat or uncooked-food contamination) in half. And yes, the much-feared E. coli was among them -- in 12 percent of the bags.

The researchers wrote in their discussion of the findings:


"It is estimated that there are about 76,000,000 cases of food-borne illness in the United States every year. Most of these illnesses originate in the home from improper cooking or handling of foods. Reusable bags, if not properly washed between uses, create the potential for cross-contamination of foods. This potential exists when raw meat products and foods traditionally eaten uncooked (fruits and vegetables) are carried in the same bags, either together or between uses. This risk can be increased by the growth of bacteria in the bags."
The study, funded by the American Chemistry Council, is being offered up as context in discussions about a California bill, AB 1998, that would ban single-use plastic bags, which -- it must be acknowledged -- do tend to have little potential for bacterial contamination.
But the researchers also assessed the effectiveness of washing the bags. Good news on that front: Machine washing or hand washing reduced bacteria levels to almost nothing.

2 comments:

  1. I wash mine alot.
    Jennifer Morris

    ReplyDelete
  2. If I could ever remember to use mine, they might need washing. :) If you are surprised by that article, you should read the one about germs on ladies purses!

    ReplyDelete

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