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Spring Cleaning: Follow Granny’s Lead
Newswise — If you’ve been putting off spring
cleaning because you don’t want to spend a
fortune on supplies this year, a Saint Louis
University germ expert says it’s time to
stop procrastinating.
You mostly need vinegar, bleach and soap –
and not a bunch of specialized supplies – to
spiff up your house, says Donna Duberg,
assistant professor of clinical laboratory
science at Saint Louis University.
“In addition to being inexpensive and
probably ingredients you already have at
home, these products are all environmentally
friendly,” she says.
Duberg begins her cleaning regime by
scrubbing with hot soapy water. She uses
Ivory, which is pure soap – no deodorant, no
chemicals, no lotions and no colors.
“Besides, it’s cheap. You don’t need to be
spending all that money for antibacterial
soaps,” she says.
Bleach, which many people use in the wash to
brighten their white clothes, is the magic
ingredient that Duberg suggests to clean
most bathrooms, which are magnets for
bacteria. Duberg mixes a 10 percent bleach
solution – one part bleach to nine parts
water – which she puts in a spray bottle.
The bleach-water loses its potency after 24
hours, so Duberg makes a fresh solution
every day she cleans.
For run-of-the mill dirt, she sprays it on
surfaces and lets it sit for about 10
minutes before she washes it off with soapy
water.
But if she’s cleaning areas where germs like
the food-borne bacteria salmonella are
likely to lurk, she lets the bleach solution
sit for a half hour before wiping it off.
White distilled vinegar is the other key
tool in Duberg’s cleaning kit.
She calls it a grease buster because it
contains acetic acid, which breaks down
oils.
She keeps a squirt bottle of 10 percent
vinegar solution on hand for general
cleaning because it keeps indefinitely.
“It leaves behind a nice shine and a fresh
smell,” she says.
She uses the vinegar solution to clean her
kitchen counters and remove the waxy coating
on fruits and vegetables sold at grocery
stores.
“The nice thing about vinegar is it’s
natural,” she says.
To clean windows, Duberg spritzes them with
the vinegar solution and wipes them with a
wad of recycled newspaper. “It takes all of
the dirt and oils off the windows,” she
says.
You don’t have to scrub any harder with
bleach or vinegar solution than you do with
more expensive cleaning products, Duberg
says.
Give the stuff time to work. Spray surfaces
and let the bleach- or vinegar-water sit for
a while so it can kill germs, de-grease and
attack ground-in dirt.
Soap, vinegar and bleach are the staples our
grandparents used to use, when specialized
products on the market weren’t so plentiful,
Duberg adds. Look at scaling back on
supplies as returning to a simpler time.
“Cleaning can be a real chore, and spending
lots of money to buy fancy products can add
insult to injury, particularly if your
household budget is taking a beating. Save
your money to indulge yourself in other
ways.”
Long a leader in educating health
professionals, Saint Louis University
offered its first degree in an allied health
profession in 1929.
Today the Doisy College of Health Sciences
offers degrees in clinical laboratory
science, nutrition and dietetics, health
informatics and information management,
medical imaging and radiation therapeutics,
occupational science and occupational
therapy, physical therapy and athletic
training, and physician assistant education.
The college’s unique curriculum prepares
students to work with health professionals
from all disciplines to ensure the best
possible patient care.
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