Allergies Health Center
The Worst Places for your Health
By Jessie Knadler
Where you put your toothbrush, TV, workout gear, and more can make a huge
impact on your habits and your life. Here, the worst place for your stuff and
where to move it to feel your best
Location, location, location: Store owners aren't the only ones concerned with finding the perfect spot in which to situate their stuff. Researchers in a wide variety of fields know that how you organize your environment--from where you stand in fitness class to the place you choose to store your meds--has a surprising effect on everything from your weight to your chances of staying well. In other words, when it comes to how you feel, it's not just what you do, it's where you do it. Here, surprisingly bad locales for your health--and the best places to optimize it.
The worst place for your toothbrush
On the bathroom sink
There's nothing wrong with the sink itself--but it's awfully chummy with the
toilet. There are 3.2 million microbes per square inch in the average toilet
bowl, according to germ expert Chuck Gerba, PhD, a professor of environmental
microbiology at the University of Arizona. When you flush, aerosolized toilet
funk is propelled as far as 6 feet, settling on the floor, the sink, and
your toothbrush. "Unless you like rinsing with toilet water, keep your
toothbrush behind closed doors--in the medicine cabinet or a nearby
cupboard," Gerba says.
The worst place for your sneakers and flip-flops
In the bedroom closet
Walking through your house in shoes you wear outside is a great way to track in
allergens and contaminants. A 1999 study found that lawn chemicals were tracked
inside the house for a full week after application, concentrated along the
traffic route from the entryway. Shoes also carry in pollen and other
allergens. Reduce exposure by slipping off rough-and-tumble shoes by the door;
store them in a basket or under an entryway bench. If your pumps stay off the
lawn, they can make the trip to the bedroom--otherwise, carry them.
The worst place to try to fall asleep
Under piles of blankets
Being overheated can keep you from nodding off, researchers say: A natural
nighttime drop in your core temperature triggers your body to get drowsy. To
ease your way to sleep, help your body radiate heat from your hands and feet,
says Helen Burgess, PhD, assistant director of the Biological Rhythms Research
Laboratory at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. Don socks to dilate
the blood vessels in the extremities--then take the socks off and let a foot
stick out from under the blankets.
The worst place to cool leftovers
In the refrigerator
Placing a big pot of hot edibles directly into the fridge is a recipe for
uneven cooling and possibly food poisoning, says O. Peter Snyder Jr., PhD,
president of the Hospitality Institute of Technology and Management in St.
Paul, MN. The reason: It can take a long time for the temperature in the middle
of a big container to drop, creating a cozy environment for bacteria. You can
safely leave food to cool on the counter for up to an hour after cooking,
Snyder says. Or divvy up hot food into smaller containers and then
refrigerate--it'll cool faster.



