What Brits do on the toilet

I remember when Chapman got a blackberry, the first in our little group to get one. He sent me an e-mail, and then another shortly thereafter:

“I wrote and sent that e-mail while sitting on the toilet.”

Today, it’s almost impossible to enter a public restroom without wondering who’s talking – it’s someone sitting on the toilet with verbal diarrhea into their cell phone.

So in honor of World Toilet Day, a survey of more than 2,000 people commissioned by charity Tearfund found that reading, chatting and texting are among the favourite activities of Britons on the toilet.

The study suggests more than 14 million people in the UK read newspapers, books and magazines on the loo.

The poll points to eight million people talking – either on the phone or to family – and one in five send texts.

The study also suggested people mostly thought about food while on the toilet, and that men were more likely to look around for a distraction than women.
 

Something I can get behind … or on: World Toilet Day

The World Toilet Organization, the other WTO, has proclaimed Nov. 19, 2008, World Toilet Day.

That’s because 2.6 billion people, or 4-out-of-10, have no access to a toilet.

CNN reports that Singaporean social-entrepreneur Jack Sim founded the non-profit World Toilet Organization in 2001, as a support network for all existing organizations. The group meets once a year to network, discuss sanitation issues and work together toward "eliminating the toilet taboo and delivering sustainable sanitation."

Goal number one: Making sanitation speakable. "What we don’t discuss, we can’t improve," insists Sim.

I’m all for that. With only a couple of weeks left till the increasingly uncomfortable Amy delivers, my conversations are soon to be dominated by the color, consistency and frequency of our baby’s poop. Oh, and the explosivity of it all.

Although as guest barfblogger Michelle of New Jersey points out, shouldn’t World Toilet Day come before Global Handwashing Day, which was Oct. 15, 2008?

 

Michele Samarya-Timm, guest barfblogger: Seattle has officially washed its hands of the five self-cleaning toilets

Oh, the news stories that catch the eye of one immersed in public health.  

While we spend most of our time on this blog discussing issues that have to do with what comes after toilet use (handwashing, hopefully),  the toilet facilities themselves occasionally come into the spotlight ….

The Seattle Times recently reported that  Seattle has officially “washed its hands” of their self-cleaning public toilets.  Which leaves visitors to that city without a convenient place to, uh, relieve themselves – as well as leaving them without a convenient place to wash their hands. 

Too bad Seattle did not work toward finding a way to deal with any problems these public toilets may have caused.     Finland found they could reduce/eliminate illicit behavior in their roadside toilets by allowing one to unlock the door by text messaging with a mobile phone.   The toilets have been secured, and a sign outside explains that the user just sends the word "open" (in Finish) to a short code and the door will be unlocked remotely. The company managing the service will keep a short-term record of all users’ phone numbers, simply so that if the toilet is then damaged by criminals, they can be traced by the police.   

And across the globe, even now, more than 600 cities have automatic public toilets — Singapore alone has 750, London 678, and Athens 500.    And there are traditional facilities across the globe as well. 

So what’s a tourist in Seattle – or elsewhere — to do? Do you ask a stranger for directions?  Advocate for conveniently located facilities?   Or map out toilet and handsink locations before you ever leave the comfort of home?   How about all three:

•    Visiting England?  The Public Toilets-Gut Trust recently began a campaign,  Can’t Wait, Won’t Wait: Public Toilet provision in the UK to educate stakeholders on need to retain or provide adequate public toilets:  

•    How about those travels down under?  Australia’s National Continence Management Strategy Project readily publishes locations of rest rooms on their searchable public toilet map:   www.toiletmap.gov.au

•    Traveling wherever the world will take you?  The Bathroom Diaries www.thebathroomdiaries.com lists, describes and rates toilet facilities in cities throughout the world. Whether you stay close to home or are planning a trip, say, to China, Turkey or Florida, you can print out a list of public facilities in the cities you plan to visit.  One can also enter search terms such as “soap” “changing table” or “don’t eat poop.”

•    Do you ever find yourself desperately looking for a clean toilet in the city? MizPee purports to find the closest, cleanest toilets in your area and sends the information to your cell phone. One can add and review rest rooms, and check their toilet paper ratings. 

•    Then there’s Diaroggle which helps one locate public toilets from a mobile phone. In addition to location, the website includes user ratings for cleanliness, the rules of gaining entrance, and occasionally even pictures snapped by users to show how good or bad the porcelain sanctuary is.  According to the site, this is  “ for the discerning, on-the-go defecator who is brave enough to use a public bathroom, but still demands a hygienic and private bathroom experience.”

In Seattle or elsewhere, we all can map our comfort breaks along with our travel itineraries.  What a wonderful resource for a discerning on-the-go handwasher.

Michéle Samarya-Timm is a Health Educator for the Franklin Township Health Department in New Jersey. 

Bathroom horrors in the friendly skies

Flying just isn’t that fun anymore. Everyone’s grumpy, things are crowded and, with airlines now charging for pillows and blankets, will they soon start charging for toilets?

And how to go under the door if you don’t have a quarter?

A frequent flying food safety friend and barfblog reader sends along her latest observations from the friendly skies:

• No offense against your species, but about 90 per cent of the men did not shut the door upon exit; reached over and closed it a couple times, but became hopeless over time.

• Repeatedly, folks of both species came out with toilet paper on their shoes that scraped off on the carpet next to my seat or just in front/behind it.  The stewardess did discrete rounds and picked the paper scraps up in a swift arc from the floor to a plastic bag attached (also discretely) next to the lavatory door.  Handwashing didn’t appear to be part of the toilet paper pick-up protocol – so far as I could tell.

• People are way bigger slobs and poop a lot more on planes than I ever imagined, pew.

Seattle’s automated toilets plagued by filth, drugs

The N.Y. Times reports that after spending $5 million on its five automated public toilets, Seattle put the units up for sale Wednesday afternoon on eBay, with a starting bid set by the city at $89,000 apiece.

In the end, the restrooms, installed in early 2004, had become so filthy, so overrun with drug abusers and prostitutes, that although use was free of charge, even some of the city’s most destitute people refused to step inside them.

The dismal outcome coincides with plans by New York, Los Angeles and Boston, among other cities, to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars for expansion this fall in their installation of automated toilets — stand-alone structures with metal doors that open at the press of a button and stay closed for up to 20 minutes. The units clean themselves after each use, disinfecting the seats and power-washing the floors.

Going number 2 — downtown

In our continuing spotlight on public toilets, USA Today reports that cities are increasingly placing self-cleaning, automated public toilets in high-pedestrian-traffic areas.

Mary Ann Racin, founder of thebathroomdiaries.com, a website that rates more than 12,000 public restrooms worldwide, said Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, New York, Pittsburgh, Atlanta and San Antonio are some of the cities that have automated public toilets (APTs), with most in the past five years.

Atlanta was the most recent to add them, in March, paying $300,000 for each of the five units and signing a two-year maintenance agreement for $1.5 million.

With the push of a button, and the drop of a quarter depending on the city, the automated door opens, and a sanitized toilet awaits. After the user is finished, the system cleans the toilet and is ready for the next user.

Not all cities are happy: Seattle has moved away from its program after a report prepared by the City Council said the APTs became a haven for drug use, drug deals and prostitution.

Don Schaffner, guest barfblogger: Perhaps it will help keep poop out of food?

When worlds collide…..

I’ve always found it interesting when disparate objects or ideas come together.  

One such collision was the subject of an earlier barfblog contribution when I wrote about a norovirus at a boy scout camp, integrating my interest in food safety and the the volunteer work I do with the boy scouts.

It also happened twice this week.  The first example has nothing to do with food safety, but hey, if Doug can write about Blacky the donkey, all’s fair.  I just can’t resist plugging this amazing YouTube video, where the band Phish covers the Lou Reed classic "Sweet Jane".  Hippy culture meets New York grit.  Cool stuff.

Anyway, on with the food safety story, sort of.  I need to explain: I’m a productivity pr0n addict.  For more on this addiction look here.  I think that one of the most entertaining and useful productivity gurus out there is Merlin Mann (yes,  that’s his real name), the editor and founder of productivity website 43Folders.com.  Anyway, when Merlin is not blogging about productivity, talking at The Google or Macworld, he’s  scouring the interweb looking for cool stuff.

And… now we get to the point of this article… and the second collision, where productivity guru meets food safety: Bottom Toilet Tissue Aid Self-wipe Cleaning: Health & Personal Care.  As Merlin quips, "Why is all the cool stuff for "disabled" people?  I could totally use this".  And maybe he right.  This might be something we could all use, and as Amazon notes "After use the tissue is discarded by  pressing an easy-to-use release button on the end of the handle.

This might be the solution to fecal cross contamination, and allow us all to avoid what O. Pete Snyder calls "toilet paper slips", helping us all to eat less poop.

Don Schaffner is an Extension Specialist in Food Science at Rutgers University, the newly appointed director of the Center for Advanced Food Technology, and a self-confessed productivity pr0n addict.

Should sinks be beside toilets or next door?

When Amy and I were in France last year, I was struck by how all of the toilets were contained rooms and the sinks for handwashing were located with the shower and bath in a separate room, and wondered if this was the best design.

Sally Bloomfield, honorary professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, has similar wonderings about bathroom layout and has criticized Norwegian Cruise Lines for ditching cabin bathrooms in favor of separate basin and toilet cubicles.

“Norovirus spreads by person-to-person contact and through contact with surfaces that have been touched by people carrying the bug. Everyone should wash their hands as soon as they have been to the toilet and the toilet area should be designed to encourage that. That means putting the sink by the toilet.”

A spokesman for NCL said,

“Having the basin outside the commode gives guests more space within the bathroom and allows guests the ability for one to shower while the other is using the sink.”

Which is why apartments like the one we stayed at in Paris are designed such, but is it best to control disease transmission?

The best places to poop in Canada

When I became editor-in-chief of The Ontarian, the University of Guelph student newspaper way back in 1987, one of the first stories I did was to rate the bathrooms at various local bars.

The paper lost thousands of dollars in advertising from disgruntled bar owners.

We found new advertisers, and the idea is still going strong.

powderroom.ca has launched a national, interactive map that allows Canadians to chart their favourite restrooms across the country, evaluating each one on a five-star system that reflects overall accessibility, cleanliness, lineups, location and decor.

Canada.com reports that although the online map is part of a campaign to promote awareness of overactive bladder, a condition affecting 12 to 18 per cent of Canadians, it’s likely to benefit anyone planning a road trip – especially those accompanied by kids.

A similar effort already has proven successful in Australia where, since 2001, the government-funded National Toilet Map has given folks the loo lowdown on roughly 14,000 private and public bathrooms in the area.

Every bathroom should have running water, soap and toilet paper. If it doesn’t, let someone in charge know.

Dude, wash your hands.

‘Mr. Toilet’ and his latest creation


Today’s the, The USA Today, reports that in South Korea, Sim Jae-duck has earned the moniker "Mr. Toilet" for his work in beautifying public restrooms.

Now, though, he’s taken his work to a whole new level.

Jae-duck is building a toilet-shaped house (complete with a luxury lavatory) just in time for the World Toilet Association conference this month in Seoul, South Korea.