Increased organic contamination found on mobile phones after touching it while using the toilet

Authors

  • Jannie Szeto Author
  • BCIT School of Health Sciences, Environmental Health Institution
  • Bobby Sidhu Supervisor
  • Fred Shaw Contributor

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47339/ephj.2015.124

Keywords:

ATP, E. coli, Mobile phone, Toilet, Cross-contamination, Fecal-oral route, Organic contamination

Abstract

 

Background: Mobile phones are considered as an indispensable handheld item in society today. Frequently used, these devices are a “high-touched” commodity. Previous research has demonstrated that E. coli and other environmental contamination are responsible for the contamination of mobile phones. This study will measure the level of contamination (or sanitation) of mobile phones at an educational institution. Method: The Hygiena MicroSnap Coliform and E. coli Enrichment Swab and the Coliform and E. coli Detection Swabs were used to detect the presence (or absence) of E. coli and total coliforms on subjects’ mobile phones. The Hygiena UltraSnap ATP Surface Test was used to detect levels of ATP. The SystemSURE Plus Luminometer generated readings in RLUs that determined the level of sanitation. In addition, each subject answered two questions regarding their gender and whether or not they have touched their phones while using the toilet within the past week. Results: No presence of E. coli or total coliforms were detected (0 RLUs). A one-tailed paired T-test confirmed that the ATP levels sampled from participants that touched their phones while using the toilet within the past week was statistically significant (P=0.008390). A two-tailed paired T-test confirmed that ATP levels was not statistically significantly different between males and females. Conclusions: Based on the results, touching mobile phones while using the toilet contributes to increased ATP levels found on mobile phones. There were no differences in ATP levels found between males and females. Future studies are required to confirm this.

 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2015-04-01

How to Cite

Szeto, J., BCIT School of Health Sciences, Environmental Health, Sidhu, B., & Shaw, F. (2015). Increased organic contamination found on mobile phones after touching it while using the toilet. BCIT Environmental Public Health Journal. https://doi.org/10.47339/ephj.2015.124

Issue

Section

Articles

Categories