Was randomly seeing why Japan hasn't been hit by the Coronavirus that bad as South Korea / Italy, despite having a case in January being the one of the most densly populated country in the world with Tokyo, of the most dense city. Its so engrained, kids clean up their own shyt at school rather than making a janitor do everything.
also for a survey, the CDC hid in a bathroom stall and counted how many ppl washed their hands...
A survey of 100,000 people in Europe by a British company found earlier this year that only 38% of men and 60% of women wash their hands after going to the toilet.
“If you stand in the men’s bathroom at work and watch men leave, they mostly don’t wash their hands if they used the urinal,” said one New York City public relations executive, who did not want to be identified for fear of alienating his colleagues.
(53 percent of respondents said they wash fewer than seven times per week)
Hidden Hygiene Habits - Revealing The Bathroom Behaviour | QS Supplies
Almost everyone we surveyed owned a shower, but 1 in 10 Americans and 1 in 7 Brits said they don't own a bath. Matters concerning the loo gave a surprise, as almost 1 in 10 Americans and 1 in 20 Brits said they now own a bidet or smart toilet with bidet function.
Data on Dirty Hands
A thousand Americans participated, evenly split between men and women. All were at least 18 years old.
2 Out of 3 Americans Don't Wash Hands
Here are the percentages who admitted they might not wash their hands properly in these situations:
A bit more than three in 10 said they wouldn't skip or skimp on hand washing in any of those situations. But the remaining 69% didn't make that clean-hands claim.
It's not that Americans don't know hand washing is important.
Two-thirds said hand washing is the best way to stop the spread of germs, and more than three-quarters said they had become more aware of hygiene's importance in the last few years.
also for a survey, the CDC hid in a bathroom stall and counted how many ppl washed their hands...

A survey of 100,000 people in Europe by a British company found earlier this year that only 38% of men and 60% of women wash their hands after going to the toilet.
“If you stand in the men’s bathroom at work and watch men leave, they mostly don’t wash their hands if they used the urinal,” said one New York City public relations executive, who did not want to be identified for fear of alienating his colleagues.
(53 percent of respondents said they wash fewer than seven times per week)
Hidden Hygiene Habits - Revealing The Bathroom Behaviour | QS Supplies
Almost everyone we surveyed owned a shower, but 1 in 10 Americans and 1 in 7 Brits said they don't own a bath. Matters concerning the loo gave a surprise, as almost 1 in 10 Americans and 1 in 20 Brits said they now own a bidet or smart toilet with bidet function.
Data on Dirty Hands
A thousand Americans participated, evenly split between men and women. All were at least 18 years old.
2 Out of 3 Americans Don't Wash Hands
Here are the percentages who admitted they might not wash their hands properly in these situations:
- After sneezing or coughing: 37%
- After handling animals or pets: 27%
- Before eating or handling food: 10%
- After going to the toilet: 7%
A bit more than three in 10 said they wouldn't skip or skimp on hand washing in any of those situations. But the remaining 69% didn't make that clean-hands claim.
It's not that Americans don't know hand washing is important.
Two-thirds said hand washing is the best way to stop the spread of germs, and more than three-quarters said they had become more aware of hygiene's importance in the last few years.



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