
Vinegar on Mattresses, Salt in Toilets: The Global DIY Cleaning Wave — and a Health Myth Busted
From Latin America to Southeast Asia, a surge of low-cost household hacks is sweeping social media, even as Indonesian doctors debunk the persistent myth that sexually transmitted infections can be caught from toilet seats or shared towels.
A long-standing public health misconception has been firmly rebutted in Jakarta, where a dermatologist from Columbia Hospital Pulomas has clarified that sexually transmitted infections cannot be contracted from toilet seats, swimming pools, or borrowed towels. The pathogens responsible for diseases such as chlamydia, gonorrhoea, and syphilis require the warm, moist environment of human mucous membranes to survive; outside the body they perish rapidly. This definitive statement, reported by Indonesian media, cuts through a myth that continues to circulate globally, often amplified by social media anxiety. It arrives amid a parallel surge of interest in domestic cleaning rituals — many of them equally focused on eliminating unseen microbial threats — that are reshaping household routines from Buenos Aires to Mexico City.
Across Latin America, a wave of low-cost, chemistry-based home maintenance tips has captured public attention. In Argentina, specialists recommend spraying mattresses with white vinegar before making the bed: the acetic acid neutralises odours, refreshes the fabric, and helps reduce dust mite populations without the need for synthetic deodorisers. Similarly, Mexican and Argentine outlets have popularised the practice of pouring coarse salt into the toilet bowl at night, often combined with bicarbonate of soda and a few drops of essential oil. The salt’s mild abrasive and antibacterial properties work over several hours to loosen mineral deposits and combat germs, potentially reducing the need for expensive cleaning products and plumbing repairs. A related tip advocates flushing hot — not boiling — water through the toilet once a week to dissolve organic residue and grease that cling to the porcelain and pipework, a method praised for its simplicity and effectiveness in curbing malodours.
Yet the same spirit of preventative domestic care also carries warnings. Textile experts caution that tossing damp towels directly into a laundry basket with other clothes creates an ideal breeding ground for bacteria and mould, a habit common in many households that can spread musty smells and potential skin irritants. Meanwhile, fire-safety authorities in the United States, cited by Latin American outlets, highlight the toaster as an overlooked hazard: accumulated crumbs and a live electrical connection can trigger overheating and even kitchen fires, prompting calls to unplug the appliance immediately after use. For garments that already carry the stubborn scent of humidity, a separate tip recommends washing with vinegar and a second natural ingredient — not bicarbonate of soda — to break down odour-causing compounds trapped in fibres, restoring freshness without resorting to repeated cycles or chemical fabric sprays.
Viewed from London or São Paulo, this convergence of practical hacks and health clarification reflects a broader shift toward sustainable, evidence-informed domesticity. The appeal of vinegar, salt, and hot water lies in their accessibility and low environmental footprint, offering an alternative to commercial disinfectants at a time of rising living costs. However, the Jakarta dermatologist’s intervention underscores a critical caveat: while homes can be made cleaner with pantry staples, the microbial world does not always behave as folklore suggests. The challenge for public health communicators is to harness the same viral energy that propels cleaning tips to dismantle persistent myths, ensuring that the global household of the future is both frugal and scientifically literate.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Latin American outlets share practical home cleaning tips: spraying vinegar on mattresses to neutralize odors and mites, pouring salt into toilets for disinfection, and unplugging toasters to prevent fires. The focus is on low-cost, preventive solutions, with a cautionary tone about overlooked household risks.
Southeast Asian outlets debunk a widespread health myth: sexually transmitted diseases cannot be caught from public toilet seats, swimming pools, or shared towels. A dermatologist confirms that the bacteria and viruses causing these infections survive very briefly outside the human body, making indirect transmission virtually impossible.
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