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Old Sep 9th, 2009 | 11:02 AM
  #21  
 
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I know that what a few travelers are doing now is to buy disposable shoe covers, When the remove there shoes they put on the paper shoe covers then walk through. Then they just throw them away.
Unfortunately I have metal in my leg so every time I go through security get the TSA massage
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Old Sep 27th, 2009 | 06:36 AM
  #22  
 
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It is disgusting! I hope all airports start using the Mag Shoe. No one will have to take off their shoes again in the airport! When I was researching I found this at www.idosecurityinc.com . I think most travelers would agree that it is so much more sanitary and less time consuming for the traveler.
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Old Oct 5th, 2009 | 11:53 PM
  #23  
 
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Seems a bit silly to worry about walking on the floor without shoes when one stays in a hotel, on a mattress that hundreds of other's have stayed on with only a sheet protecting it... it might protect the mattress from dust and dirty, but I am sorry, fellow germophobes... but it doesn't stop other bodily fluids seeping through... Do these people also not touch any door handles, particiularly when coming out of the bathroom... do they press the toilet button - they probably do - and surely that would be a haven for dirty fingers!!!
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Old Oct 6th, 2009 | 04:24 PM
  #24  
 
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they press the toilet button with their feet!!
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Old Oct 6th, 2009 | 04:33 PM
  #25  
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Miss Green, you might like to peruse this most remarkable Fodors thread, which speaks to the desirability of carrying one's own sheets when one travels. I find it pretty funny.

http://www.fodors.com/community/trav...bed-sheets.cfm
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Old Oct 18th, 2009 | 07:53 AM
  #26  
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I think I fall somewhere in the middle on this. I am not concerned about walking on the floor through security (though I do wear socks, not sandals, as I do most of the time because I don't like how dirty my feet get or how sandals reduce my ability to go anywhere on any surface at speed.

What grosses me out are the people who walk barefoot or in their regular socks on the airplane into the toilet. Those floors are always wet with scattered paper--who knows what. So I either wear shoes or slippers over my socks on the plane when walking around.

I would believe the kitchen faucet as being very germy. I saw results of a study that checked for how/where germs associated with illnesses were in the home and it showed that if an ill person used a bathroom, the germs were as likely to be on the walls as specifically on faucets and handles they touched--airborne. Also have read that public bathroom door handles are some of the nastiest things to avoid since you may have washed your hands after touching the toilet button, but not everyone else.
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Old Oct 18th, 2009 | 10:12 AM
  #27  
 
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I ALWAYS use Purell liberally when I return to my seat after using the restroom on the plane and I would NEVER go into that restroom barefoot or in my socks.
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Old Oct 22nd, 2009 | 12:10 PM
  #28  
 
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I don't get it. If you have socks on your feet isn't that better than barefoot in the airplane bathroom? What's wrong with going barefoot in general though? We don't put our feet in our mouths. ?
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Old Oct 22nd, 2009 | 01:23 PM
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sharie, just the possibility of standing in someone else's urine in my stocking feet doesn't appeal to me. Besides, going barefoot is not a healthy thing if you have any cuts or abrasions on the bottom of your feet or if you happen to be diabetic or have a compromised immune system.

If you have no problem with it, then go ahead. Not my place to tell you what you can or cannot do.
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Old Oct 22nd, 2009 | 06:23 PM
  #30  
 
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ah, I didn't think of it that way thanks
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Old Oct 27th, 2009 | 11:56 AM
  #31  
 
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little packets, individual to be sure, that we pass around before eating anything anywhere other than home....keep hands out of face, teeth, ears, etc...don't eat on a plane, if you can help it (she/he sometimes sneeze), and cover your mouth when you or someone around you coughs/...that's all you can do...if you are worried about your socks, trash them after you get thru security and put on a clean pair from your bag.
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Old Nov 1st, 2009 | 11:38 AM
  #32  
 
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Today I don't think it matters what you do. Got off a plane on Tuesday and have had a cough for a couple of days. I don't remember the last time I had anything. It's just my turn. Although, I want to blame it on that woman across the aisle who didn't cover her mouth when she cough (a lot) but dh isn't sick.

I agree about going into the airplane bathrooms in my stocking or bare feet. You never know. I'm not big on barefoot anyway.

BTW, I wiped down my tray each flight on Tues and I've never done that.
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Old Nov 1st, 2009 | 03:15 PM
  #33  
 
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After cleaning the guest bathroom at my house, the only one that men ever use, I'm pretty disgusted by the entire male gender right now. Honestly if you guys can't hit the mark in a normal bathroom, how could I expect you to hit the mark in an airplane bathroom?? Going into an airplane bathroom in my socks or barefoot is a pretty disgusting thought.

As for going through the security lines, I don't see a problem with wearing flip flops other than the fact that airplanes are always cold and I'd rather pack the flip flops and wear the walking shoes. The germs idea doesn't bother me at all, but I'm not immune compromised and don't have misc cuts and scrapes on my feet. If you're immune-compromised in any fashion you need to take every extra precaution imaginable when traveling.
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Old Nov 3rd, 2009 | 05:03 AM
  #34  
 
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<i>WATER WINS Water was the most effective at removing stomach bug viruses from the hands, Emory University researchers find. They planted stomach bug viruses on volunteers' fingers and allowed them to dry. The results, presented this week at the American Society for Microbiology Meeting in Orlando, Fla., showed the percentage of the viruses removed by water, hand soap, and alcohol-based hand sanitizer. Water removed 96 percent of the virus; liquid antibacterial soap removed 88 percent; and the hand sanitizer removed only 46 percent.</i>

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=1993859
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Old Nov 3rd, 2009 | 05:50 AM
  #35  
 
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Thanks for posting that AA. I wonder if water is the most effective because people spend more time using it than the others?

Time is the best way to wash hands at least 30 seconds. Running through the ABCs, a prayer or a poem.
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Old Nov 3rd, 2009 | 06:01 AM
  #36  
 
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<i> wonder if water is the most effective because people spend more time using it than the others?</i>

that could be a consideration if the study was uncontrolled, but I believe this study was done in strictly controlled environment, so each subject was given the same amount of time to wash their hands.
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Old Nov 4th, 2009 | 12:33 AM
  #37  
 
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Hate the hand sanitizer ritual I see going on with tables of Americans. No one else from other countries do this and I don't think anybody is getting ill more often.

It smells awful and looks tacky, sitting at a table and passing a little bottle of it around. Then if anyone declines, folks look at them like perhaps they are unhygenic. Weird!
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Old Nov 5th, 2009 | 06:12 PM
  #38  
 
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Sorry you find us weird, Mainhattengirl. Maybe we should just take our tacky selves and our tourist dollars somewhere else?
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Old Nov 6th, 2009 | 04:57 AM
  #39  
 
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Well, that is taking it to extremes. Considering I see it the most when I am at home in America! I never said anything about tourists, so not sure where the "tourist dollars" comment comes from?

Nobody used to do this, then all of a sudden it became popular with Americans. Do you feel like it helps with illnesses? Why don't other countries think it is a good idea?
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Old Nov 6th, 2009 | 01:24 PM
  #40  
 
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Perhaps that is why so many kids get ill and have allegires as they are over sanitised?
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