Clickbait! If you read the article, there's no gloom or doom.
30 or more years ago (?), Consumer Reports did a report on toothbrushes and they did a follow-up note or article clarifying their recommendation of how often to change toothbrushes. Their recommendation was not because of bacteria as many readers apparently thought, but because the bristles get worn down and don't clean as effectively.
And the "toilet plume"? Is that more of a problem in Britain? Looking back at John Postgate's Microbes and Man (which I read back in the 1990s):
Few people realize, however, that when a used toilet is flushed, a turbulence and spray of water and excrement is generated comparable to a sneeze: in any toilet one can isolate faecal clostridia and streptococci from the ceiling, walls and door handle as well as around and beneath the seat. British water closets certainly generate such infectious aerosols; it is probable that the vortex type favoured in the USA, depending on a swirl rather than a splash to flush the closet, is less generous in the matter of dispersing faecal microbes around the room.
(That was written back in the 1990s or earlier; British folks and travelers can obviously provide more current insight than me, who has never traveled outside the U.S.!)
A cheap method would be to leave the brush head soak overnight in a saline solution. Use tap water or COLD water from boiled kettle plus small amount salt.
Clickbait! If you read the article, there's no gloom or doom.
30 or more years ago (?), Consumer Reports did a report on toothbrushes and they did a follow-up note or article clarifying their recommendation of how often to change toothbrushes. Their recommendation was not because of bacteria as many readers apparently thought, but because the bristles get worn down and don't clean as effectively.
And the "toilet plume"? Is that more of a problem in Britain? Looking back at John Postgate's Microbes and Man (which I read back in the 1990s):
(That was written back in the 1990s or earlier; British folks and travelers can obviously provide more current insight than me, who has never traveled outside the U.S.!)I hate to say it, but... duh.
It's literally going in your mouth. And rinsing it with tap water isn't going to fix that.
There's bacteria everywhere. I rinse mine in grocery-store-strength peroxide every few days to cut down on the 'problem'
Toothpaste basically has dish detergent in it which probably makes it not quite so bad.
Would washing toothbrush with soap just work?
A cheap method would be to leave the brush head soak overnight in a saline solution. Use tap water or COLD water from boiled kettle plus small amount salt.
Any antibaterial would work
I also have seen recommendations to microwave your toothbrush.
Heat and plastic as a combination always scares me, I'd probably avoid microwaving toothbrushes if I were you.
Didn’t mythbusters prove fecal matter on brand new toothbrushes, fresh out of the package?
> fresh out of the package?
No, but the episode proved that where you place the tooth brush in the bathroom doesn't really matter (ie next to the toilet or far away).
TLDR; "I don't think most people are getting sick from their toothbrush," she says.
This is just germaphobe pornography. Your toothbrush is fine. You’re less healthy if everything is like a clean room in your life.