Homosexual Felcher Sabotage - Soda Fountains Squirt Fecal Bacteria, Study Finds

Subject:Homosexual Felcher Sabotage - Soda Fountains Squirt Fecal Bacteria, Study Finds
Date:Fri, 15 Jan 2010 09:10:32 +0000 (UTC)
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Germs/soda-fountains-squirt-fecal-bacteria-s
tudy-finds/story?id=9506583

Those soda fountain machines found in restaurants and fast food joints
may be squirting out liquids contaminated with fecal bacteria, a small
study found.

Whether it was self-serve or behind the counter, nearly half of all
sodas dispensed from a sample of 30 machines in the Roanoke Valley in
Virginia had coliform bacteria -- a group of bacteria banned in drinking
water by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) because it
indicates the possibility of fecal contamination.

"The EPA regulates our drinking supply, and there can be some bacteria,
but one of the things that is not allowed is coliform bacteria," said
Renee D. Godard, professor of biology at Hollins University and a
co-author of the paper published in the January print issue of the
International Journal of Food Microbiology.

"We can't have that in our drinking supply. But they're coming out of
these soda fountain machines," she said.

The soda machines had turned into a bacteria metropolis with Escherichia
coli (E. coli), species of Klebsiella, Staphylococcus, Stenotrophomonas,
Candida, and Serratia. Most of the bacteria were resistant to the 11
antibiotics Godard tested on her samples.

"About 70 percent of the beverages had bacteria and 48 percent of them
had coliform bacteria," said Godard.

However, only 20 percent of the sodas sampled had coliform bacteria that
exceeded the EPA limit for drinking water.

Since the tap water and ice from the machines didn't test positive for
bacteria, Godard and her team ruled out the possibility of a valley-wide
contamination of the water supply.

Various brands of soft drinks and various types -- sugared, diet or even
water -- were contaminated, leading Godard to think that it wasn't the
soda, but the machine that was growing bacteria.

>From all her testing, Godard still isn't sure where the bacteria came
from. Few people observed in the restaurants touched the nozzles of the
soda fountain machines and restaurant managers Godard interviewed
reported cleaning the nozzles daily.

But only one restaurant manager reported rinsing the plastic tubing
within the machines on a regular basis.

How Could Soda Fountain Machines Grow Bacteria?
Godard hypothesizes that it could only take one contamination of the
nozzle for the bacteria to grow up into the plastic tubing and start
colonizing within the machine.

"Our best guess is they're actually establishing themselves on the
lining of the plastic tubing. The reason we say that is in other areas,
such as hospitals, it is known that bacteria can establish themselves on
plastic tubing for machines," said Godard.

The Coca-Cola Company, said in a statement to ABCNews.com that it "has
been serving fountain beverages for more than 120 years, and we are not
aware of any illnesses related to our fountain-dispensed beverages and
the microorganisms mentioned in the Virginia study."

Coca-Cola said it purchases the soda fountain dispensers from
independent companies and "routinely communicate with our customers, who
maintain the fountain equipment, about our standards and expectations
for quality and sanitation, and we provide them with training,"
according to the company's statements.

Godard said she hopes the news will lead restaurant owners to rinse out
their machines more often.

However, Godard pointed out that the most common model of soda fountains
in her study -- manufactured by Cornelius Inc. -- recommended flushing
out the internal tubes at least once a month and daily cleaning of
nozzles.

"But my guess is that most restaurant owners wouldn't have the vaguest
idea about how to flush those machines, or that they would even need
too," said Godard.

Microbiologists not involved in the study weren't surprised of coliform
colonies in the soda fountain machines.

"Wherever man is there will be representation of feces," said Philip
Tierno, director of Clinical Microbiology and Immunology at New York
University Langone Medical Center.

"We're basically bathed in feces as a society," he said.

How To Prevent Bacteria in Soda Fountain Machines
Charles Gerba, a microbiologist at the University of Arizona was "not
too surprised" to learn coliform bacteria were found in soda fountain
machines either.

"We've seen it with drinking water dispensing machines where customers
fill up jugs of water," said Gerba. "You see it anytime you have
something where people can touch the dispenser."

As gross as the contamination sounds, experts weren't too worried about
becoming infected from the bacteria found in the study unless a person
is immunocompromised through cancer treatment, medications following an
organ transplant or if they have AIDS.

After all, there haven't been any outbreaks of gastrointestinal disease
reported in Roanoke Valley or across the nation recently.

But microbiologists did see the soda machines as potential hosts for
more threatening bacteria and viruses.


Who Should Care About It?
Godard thought it was possible that a more virulent strain of E. coli
could grow in the machines since her group found a less dangerous form.

"There are strains of E. coli that aren't dangerous," she explained.

Gerba and Tierno were also concerned about the possibility of a serious
Norovirus outbreak. They reason if fecal contamination can spread to
soda fountain dispensers, then viruses spread by fecal contamination
could, too.

"That's what I would worry about because you get one of these tips
contaminated and you contaminate a lot of soda," said Gerba. "It
suggests it's a route for transmitting something like Norovirus because
fecal contamination is occurring."

One such incident occurred in 2000 on a military base hospitalizing 99
soldiers with gastrointestinal illness, according to Godard's paper.

Tierno thought restaurants could avoid potential Norovirus outbreaks by
taking measures similar to cruise ships, which have implemented strict
rules in cafeterias since a string of Norovirus outbreaks in the last
decade.

"Bottom line -- there should be better cleaning of the instruments, and
probably the public should not have access to dispensing their own
sodas," said Tierno.




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