Make sure you disinfect your shopping - Asthma Community ...

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Make sure you disinfect your shopping

golden-retriever profile image

COVID-19 can live on the surface of objects for hours to days.

The objects you buy in a supermarket have been handled by one or more people: the shelf stocker for sure, and probably other shoppers.

At home, keep the kitchen sink (or a container) full of cold water. Add a cap full of Dettol. Every item that comes through your front door should either go into that water for a short time, or be wiped down with disinfectant if that isn’t possible. Personally, I don’t rinse it off again.

I would never normally cross-post, but I did post this on British Lung Foundation and am posting it here too.

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golden-retriever profile image
golden-retriever
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15 Replies
golden-retriever profile image
golden-retriever

PS - And then disinfect the work surface.

RichardWk profile image
RichardWk

That post has filled me with absolute fear, are you saying my shopping can carry the virus.

golden-retriever profile image
golden-retriever in reply to RichardWk

Sadly, yes it can. You can pick up the virus from surfaces. And surfaces include tin cans, cornflake packets, dog’s fur, cafe tables, cauliflower, ...

golden-retriever profile image
golden-retriever in reply to RichardWk

edition.cnn.com/2020/02/17/...

peege profile image
peege in reply to RichardWk

It's called cross contamination Richard. If there a very vulnerable person in the home outside clothes and shoes should be left at the door.

Wheezycat profile image
Wheezycat

I don’t have Dettol or anything like that. I would replace it with washing up liquid , equivalent to soap, something this virus doesn’t like.

golden-retriever profile image
golden-retriever in reply to Wheezycat

Only used washing up liquid if you rinse with running water that immediately flows down the plug hole, and not in a sink full of water as stated above . Otherwise, you will actually spread any potential virus to all items that go in that water.

Wheezycat profile image
Wheezycat in reply to golden-retriever

That is probably what I would do.......but it is said that soap removes the fatty surface of the virus, thus killing it. Thus better than disinfectant, though that is better than nothing.. I I am wrong then there is something I have not understood.

Lynneypin profile image
Lynneypin

You are much more likely to catch this from another person, please try not to overly stress about this. Just keep washing those hands!

golden-retriever profile image
golden-retriever in reply to Lynneypin

Lynneypin, a lot of people here have serious asthma and being ‘less likely’ to catch it from their virus infected shopping than from someone sneezing in their face is still a very bad outcome.

Unfortunately, many people here need to be extremely careful. This is not a rehearsal. There may be no second chances. “Don’t stress” may sound like good, sensible advice but in this case it doesn’t help anybody here. :(

Disinfecting shopping is a the sensible thing to do and isn’t actually very difficult.

Lynneypin profile image
Lynneypin in reply to golden-retriever

Just so you know I’m one of those people with a serious lung condition.

golden-retriever profile image
golden-retriever in reply to Lynneypin

Sure, but that doesn’t change what I said. And the article you posted below could already be out of date, or be out of date tomorrow. A week is an eternity in this pandemic.

Currently governments and health services across the world, and the WHO, are begging people to do everything they possibly can to stay well and reduce the risk, and to reduce the burden on hospitals.

Lynneypin profile image
Lynneypin

DO YOU NEED TO WASH YOUR GROCERIES WHEN YOU GET HOME?

Ben Chapman, a professor and food safety expert at N.C. State University, says that washing or cleaning our groceries when we return home from a store really isn’t necessary, since food and food packaging has not been identified as a risk factor, according to available research.

“I don’t think right now that washing or trying to sanitize a cereal box is an effective way to stop the pathway of the transmission of COVID-19,” Chapman told The News & Observer on Tuesday.

The first and last defense, he says, is hand-washing and hand-sanitizing.

“When I grab my cereal box and fill my bowl and put the box away, I wash my hands,” he said.

And as far as washing fruits and vegetables before consuming, that’s something that has always been recommended, he said.

Even so, if people feel better cleaning their groceries when they get home, it’s fine to do it.

“It’s not gonna hurt, especially in this time of anxiety,” he said. “If it makes someone feel better to wash them, they they should do that.”

The real shopping risk?

“Being around people who are experiencing symptoms. That’s Number 1 at the top with a bullet,” Chapman said.

Norsca profile image
Norsca

Thanks for this! I hadn’t thought of it. I forwarded it to my daughter who has RA and lives 2 hours flight from where I live. Hope that’s ok.

golden-retriever profile image
golden-retriever in reply to Norsca

That’s fine Norsca. Glad it helped.

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