Scottish Daily Mail

BBC ‘scaremonge­rs’ mocked for saying: Wipe down your supermarke­t trolley!

- By Susie Coen TV and Radio Reporter

THE BBC has been accused of ‘ridiculous scaremonge­ring’ after it encouraged viewers to use baby wipes to clean the handles of supermarke­t trolleys.

During an investigat­ion into bacteria on baskets and trolleys, footage was shown of someone cleaning a handle with a wet wipe.

But the single-use cloths cause huge damage to beaches as well as clogging sewers.

Presenter Kirstie Allsopp was among viewers who criticised Wednesday night’s programme. BBC One’s Watchdog Live showed footage of trolleys covered with rubbish, including beer cans and food packaging. The programme’s investigat­ors then took swabs from both a basket and trolley at ten branches of each of the big four supermarke­ts – Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Asda and Morrison’s.

After swabs were sent off to a lab to be tested, the base of one Tesco’s trolley was revealed to be contaminat­ed with salmonella which Kate Thompson, of the Chartered Institute of Environmen­tal Health in Wales, said posed a ‘small risk’ of making shoppers ill.

A clip of someone wiping the handle of their trolley down with a wet wipe was then shown. Property expert Miss Allsopp wrote on Twitter: ‘When BBC Watchdog starts encouragin­g people to wipe trolley handles with anti-bacterial wipes we know that we are definitely all going to hell in a handcart’. She added: ‘Wipes are destroying our sewage system.’

Others labelled the segment ‘irresponsi­ble scaremonge­ring’. One wrote: ‘I must remember not to lick the bottom of my trolley the next time I go shopping.’

But others welcomed the investigat­ion, with one viewer vowing to never use a trolley again. Tesco told Watchdog that food safety was its ‘absolute priority’. The BBC said the Watchdog Live report had an overwhelmi­ngly positive response.’

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