Keep washing your hands and disinfecting surfaces to ensure you don't make your immune system work too hard. Regular cleanings are important, but ultimately you will be fine. Apparently a little bit of poop never hurt anyone.
Sources: (Buzznick)
Studies have shown time and time again that most phones have fecal matter on them, which is great considering how much you put them up to your face! A 2011 survey also showed that 75% of Americans admitted to using their phones on the toilet.
Because raw meat carries a high level of fecal bacteria, cutting boards host up to 200 times more fecal bacteria than toilets.
Hands are one of the dirtiest parts of the body, so when you designate a place for many different hands to touch, you can expect a certain result.
Ah yes, the thing you touch before you eat. On average, there are 100 times more bacteria on restaurant menus than a restaurant toilet seat—and that's not because they have super clean toilet seats.
This one is a bit frightening. One study showed that 70% of the ice served in fast food restaurants in the US had more bacteria than toilet water.
Those theater seats have had many butts in them, many spilled drinks, and even bacteria commonly found in feces.
You wouldn’t touch your toilet and then your face, would you? Hopefully, that answer is no, but it turns out there are tons of other surfaces that host several times more bacteria, and you definitely aren't washing your hands after you touch them.
Check out this gallery to find out where the germs are hiding in plain sight.
Everyday items dirtier than your toilet
Germophobes, enter at your own risk!
HEALTH Germs
You wouldn’t touch your toilet and then your face, would you? Hopefully, that answer is no, but it turns out there are tons of other surfaces that host several times more bacteria, and you definitely aren't washing your hands after you touch them.
Check out this gallery to find out where the germs are hiding in plain sight.