The coronavirus pandemic seems to have spawned a culture of germophobes, with Americans zealously squirting on sanitizer and disinfecting their homes. According to the market research firm Research and Markets, sales of household cleaning products have skyrocketed 195 percent due to COVID concerns.
Public areas are also hubs of hypervigilant hygiene. In office buildings, schools, gyms, movie theaters and restaurants, foggers mist cleaning agents over desks, chairs, countertops and tables.
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But what kind of a toll is excessive sanitation taking on our health? And for that matter, how much is it actually doing to protect us from infection anyway? Put down that bottle of Lysol and read on.
Get tips on how to stay healthy, safe and sane during the novel coronavirus pandemic.
How Important Is It to Disinfect Surfaces During COVID?
In short: not very.
"Our understanding about how SARS-CoV-2 is spread has changed over time," says Joseph Allen, director of the Healthy Buildings Program at Harvard University, associate professor of Exposure Assessment Science at the T.H. Chan School of Public Health and chair of the Lancet COVID-19 Commission Task Force on Workplace, School and Travel Safety. "Early on, the CDC, World Health Organization and others were highlighting close contact transmission, with some transmission through contaminated surfaces, or what we call fomites — so it was reasonable that people were disinfecting surfaces frequently and routinely."
"We had limited information at the start of the pandemic, and so a narrative took hold," says MarkAlain Déry, DO, MPH, medical director of infectious disease for Access Health Louisiana. "The narrative was that everything had to be washed down."
But now it's clear that airborne transmission is driving the pandemic. A September 2020 review in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that fomite transmission is rare — and that even in the few presumed cases, respiratory transmission couldn't be entirely ruled out.
"At this point, we know that while fomite transmission can happen, it is not the dominant mode," Allen says. "You will not have a superspreader event through fomites, whereas with airborne transmission we have seen outbreaks where 90 percent of people in the space are contaminated by one person."
Dr. Déry explains that the quantity of viral particles is more pronounced when it travels through the air. If an unmasked person with COVID coughs on a table and you then smear your hand on it and stick your finger in your nose, you will not get as much of the virus in your system as you would if the person coughed in your face.
"Your hands are poor transmitters of the virus," Dr. Déry says. "Moving the pathogens from a fomite to a portal entry — like your eyes, mouth or nose — is not an effective way to spread the infection."
Furthermore, if you do touch a contaminated surface, simply washing your hands will prevent the virus from spreading.
"The reality is that shared air is the problem, not shared surfaces," Allen says. "And the effective method to kill the virus in the air is to dilute or filter out respiratory particles through ventilation."
But the question remains: Is overzealous sanitation actually doing us any harm? Potentially.
"Not only are far too many organizations spending valuable time and resources focusing on surfaces rather than airborne transmission," Allen says, "but the cleaning chemicals used are often respiratory hazards."
What Happens if Disinfectant Is in the Air You Breathe?
Most disinfectant sprays include volatile organic compounds, or VOCs.
"VOCs are designed to evaporate quickly," Allen says. "They volatize, which means the chemicals start in a liquid solution but then enter the gas phase where they can be inhaled through the air."
According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), exposure to certain VOCs may result in eye, nose and throat irritation; headaches; loss of coordination; nausea; damage to the liver, kidneys and central nervous system; and cancer.
"You are using these chemicals on surfaces to disrupt the biology of a virus or bacteria," Allen says, "So it would make sense that they are not going to be benign on your own cells if inhaled."
How much of an affect these toxins have on your health depends on the concentration you are exposed to, which is determined by A) the quantity of disinfectant used and B) how quickly it is diluted through ventilation.
"Often, organizations are cleaning so frequently that the levels of the VOCs build up in the air, creating a potential respiratory hazard for people in that space," Allen says.
To put this into perspective, imagine someone smoking a cigarette indoors.
"If you have really good ventilation, you would be able to smell the smoke, but it may not be overwhelming or all that visible," Allen says. "Compare that to a room with very low ventilation, where you can see and smell the smoke — it would be overwhelming."
Scientists measure ventilation rate via "air changes per hour," or ACPH, which refers to the number of times air exits and enters a room every hour. According to Allen, a typical home gets half an ACPH, so it can take several hours to remove 95 percent of what's in the air.
Allen's team recommends schools get 6 ACPH. "At that rate, you can remove the majority of anything in the air within 30 minutes," he says. (That said, the average school clocks in at 1.5 ACPH.)
Ventilation rates are also variable by season — for example, if the windows are open when the weather is nice.
"We recommend 4 to 6 ACPH for COVID protection, but even buildings with low ventilation rates can be leaky to some extent, so air exchange and dilution is still happening," Allen says.
In other words, if your workplace or your kids' school mists down surfaces at the end of the day, the VOCs will be diluted enough by the following morning that they won't pose a peril to your health — even if the room is poorly ventilated.
But it's a different story if you're the one constantly spritzing on disinfectant.
"It is acute exposure we are worried about," Allen says. "And for workers like janitorial staff who have to apply these chemicals all day at work, it is a particular concern."
What to Do About It
Before going to town with the Lysol, open all the doors and windows to increase air flow. And consider using presoaked wipes instead of sprays to cut back on the chemical content you’re breathing in.
“Coronavirus pathogens are very easy to remove or inactivate on surfaces by simply wiping them down,” Allen says. “You may have seen images of the White House spraying disinfectant in the air, but this won’t contribute in a meaningful way to eradicating any virus that is in the air.”
4 Other Side Effects of Using Disinfectants Regularly
1. It Can Irritate Your Skin
Mahboobeh Mahdavinia, MD, PhD, associate professor of allergy and immunology at Rush University, reports that the number of patients she has seen with rashes on their hands has doubled since the pandemic began.
"Contact dermatitis manifests in redness and inflammation, while eczema causes dry, scaly, itchy skin," Dr. Mahdavinia says. "They can both be allergic reactions to frequent disinfectant and hand sanitizer use."
What to Do About It
If you have contact dermatitis or eczema, wear gloves when cleaning your home and opt for hand-washing over sanitizer use.
“Moisturize your hands at least three times a day,” Dr. Mahdavinia says. “The best time to do so is right after you wash your hands, so that the cream gets absorbed and seals your skin barrier to lock in moisture.”
2. It Can Weaken Your Immune System
It sounds contradictory, but an overly clean environment can make it harder for your body to fight off infection.
One theory, dubbed the hygiene hypothesis, suggests that children need exposure to germs in order to "educate" their immune systems so they can learn how to defend against infection. A landmark study in the August 2016 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine discovered that children with greater microbial exposure had more robust immunity than those raised in more sanitary households.
"This is particularly important in the first few years of life, when the immune system is developing," Dr. Mahdavinia says. "Research has found that kids who grow up in an overly sterile home are more prone to allergic diseases, such as eczema, asthma, food allergies and allergic rhinitis."
What's more, because "good" bacteria plays a crucial role in fending off infection and keeping people of all ages healthy, even adults' immune function can be affected by excessive hygiene.
"Over-cleaning will destroy the good bacteria as well as the bad," Dr. Mahdavinia says.
When you grab a disinfectant wipe with your bare hands, you'll obliterate the microbiome of helpful bacteria on your skin — which in turn can harm your gut microbiome. For adults, the effects are fleeting, and the good bacteria will begin to grow back within hours of touching disinfectant.
But for small children, the effect can be long-lasting.
"It is hard to redevelop a thriving microbiome after the first three years of life," Dr. Mahdavinia says. "If you have lost some of the good bacteria, it is challenging to reintroduce it into the body."
What to Do About It
So how do you balance keeping your house clean and virus-free without squashing healthy bacteria in the process? Aside from the kitchen, which should be thoroughly scrubbed on a daily basis to eliminate food-borne pathogens, limit deep cleans to once a week and only use disinfecting products in the bathroom.
“In the meantime, sustain a clean environment by not bringing in outside dirt,” Dr. Mahdavinia says. “Don’t wear shoes in the house and leave everything that has been exposed to the outside world right by the entrance.”
For example, hang coats, backpacks and purses on hooks near the door, rather than slinging them onto the sofa or kitchen counter. That way, if someone sneezed on your jacket while you were out, those viral particles are less likely to spread to the main living area.
3. It Could Give Kids and Pets Tummy Trouble
Young children frequently put their hands and other objects in their mouths. Dogs and cats have a tendency to lick surfaces.
"If some of the toxic chemicals used in disinfectant products are accidentally ingested, it might create GI distress like nausea, diarrhea and vomiting," Dr. Mahdavinia says.
Just imagine your fur baby gnawing on a coaster that has been recently wiped down or your toddler rubbing her hands on a Lysol-coated tabletop and then sucking her thumb.
What to Do About It
In addition to cleaning less frequently, stick to products that disinfect with isopropyl alcohol. “Alcohol is destructed quite rapidly by the body, so it is not as dangerous as some other chemical cleaning ingredients,” Dr. Mahdavinia says.
On the other hand, two to avoid are bleach and quaternary ammonium (found in ingredients like benzalkonium chloride and others with lengthy names ending in ammonium chloride).
In a June 2016 study in Respiratory Medicine, women who cleaned their homes with bleach were more likely to develop asthma; and a March 2014 study in Clinical and Experimental Allergy found similar results for health care workers using disinfectants that contain quaternary ammonium. A June 2017 study in Birth Defects Research also revealed that quaternary ammonia is associated with birth defects and reduced fertility.
4. Respiratory Conditions Might Flare Up
Certain health issues can make your respiratory system extra sensitive to the toxic irritants in disinfectant sprays.
"It can cause wheezing in people with asthma, vocal-chord dysfunction or hyperosmia, a heightened sense of smell," Dr. Mahdavinia says.
Dr. Déry says other people at heightened risk include those with pulmonary or respiratory disease, such as lung cancer or cryptogenic organizing pneumonia.
What to Do About It
Stick with wipes rather than sprays, which substantially cut down on inhalation exposure, according to the EPA. Open the windows and doors, and wear gloves or wash your hands thoroughly afterward.
Even better? Leave the deep cleaning to someone else!
What If Someone in My Home Has COVID?
In that case, the benefits of disinfecting outweigh the downsides. Frequently wipe down high-touch surfaces, like doorknobs, handles, light switches, countertops, toilets, faucets and sinks using an EPA-approved COVID-fighting disinfectant.
"The person with COVID should isolate as much as possible from the rest of the household," Dr. Déry says. "Everyone should be masked and washing their hands often."
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So, How Bad Is It Really to Use Disinfectant All the Time?
Unless you have an underlying respiratory disease, you're the parent of a small child or you have to perform extensive spraying as part of your job, it's not something you need to worry about.
"We are exposed to these types of chemicals all the time," Dr. Déry says, adding that the greatest risk may well be that this "hygiene theater" creates a false sense of security against COVID.
Mainly, the experts agree that it's simply unnecessary: a waste of time, energy and money that would be better put toward enhanced ventilation and air filtration.
"If this strategy of disinfecting surfaces significantly reduced the risk for COVID transmission, I would be all for it," Allen says. "But we know that is not the case, so why are we focusing so much of our attention on shared surfaces over shared air?"
That said, many other pathogens are spread through fomites (bacteria are a biggie), so it's not a bad idea to disinfect surfaces.
"Just be selective in how you do it," Allen says. "You don't need to deep clean every day in your home, and if cleaning is being used as a rationale for keeping kids out of school, that is not an effective risk-reduction strategy."
According to Dr. Mahdavinia, taking extra cleaning precautions during the pandemic is OK. "But in normal times, these disinfectants should not be used on a regular basis at your home aside from in the bathroom," she says.
Concerned About COVID-19?
Read more stories to help you navigate the novel coronavirus pandemic:
- EPA: "Volatile Organic Compounds' Impact on Indoor Air Quality"
- Clinical and Experimental Allergy: "Asthma among workers in healthcare settings: role of disinfection with quaternary ammonium compounds"
- Respiratory Medicine: "Women using bleach for home cleaning are at increased risk of non- allergic asthma"
- Birth Defects Research: "Ambient and Dosed Exposure to Quaternary Ammonium Disinfectants Causes Neural Tube Defects in Rodents"
- The New England Journal of Medicine: "Innate Immunity and Asthma Risk in Amish and Hutterite Farm Children"
- EPA: "How can members of my household use disinfectants properly to control COVID-19 if a family member is asthmatic or has other chronic respiratory disease?"
- Annals of Internal Medicine: "Transmission of SARS-CoV-2: A Review of Viral, Host, and Environmental Factors"
- Research and Markets: "Household Cleaners: COVID-19"
Is this an emergency? If you are experiencing serious medical symptoms, please see the National Library of Medicine’s list of signs you need emergency medical attention or call 911.