Times Colonist

Study: Cleaning can be health risk

- ROBERT RODRIGUEZ

Just in case you needed a legitimate excuse to be messy, there’s a new study that says cleaning might actually be bad for your health.

Researcher­s at the University of Bergen in Norway found that regular use of cleaning sprays contribute­d to a greater decline in lung function compared to those who did not clean.

The study, published in the American Thoracic Society’s American Journal of Respirator­y and Critical Care Medicine, focused on women who work as cleaners or regularly use cleaning sprays.

The 20-year research project that involved more than 6,000 participan­ts, concluded that the women who worked as cleaners had the comparable lung function of someone who smoked for about “20 pack-years.”

Scientists define one pack year as being the equivalent of 20 cigarettes smoked daily for one year.

“That level of lung impairment was surprising at first,” said lead study author Øistein Svanes, a doctoral student at the Department for Clinical Science. “However, when you think of inhaling small particles from cleaning agents that are meant for cleaning the floor and not your lungs, maybe it is not so surprising after all.”

Researcher­s speculate that the decline in lung function is attributed to the irritation most cleaning chemicals cause on the mucous membranes lining the airways.

Unfortunat­ely, Svanes doesn’t recommend we just give up cleaning to protect our health. His suggestion is to develop cleaning products that can’t be inhaled, or use simpler cleaning methods.

“Microfibre cloths and water,” he said, “are more than enough for most purposes.”

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