N.B.: As some astute folks pointed out in the comments, I mistakenly referenced methicillin-resistant bacteria as an incurable infection – buttttt, meant vancomycin-resistant bacteria. Thanks so much to all the folks that caught it! -G.R.
This post from our best friend forever, His Eminence Gary Leff, keeper of the holy scriptures of View From the Wing, is a few days old, but really deserves a closer inspection. In summary, he points to another blog, Through the Lens, written by a flight attendant, and a particular post detailing her routine when entering a hotel room, and, like most items on Leff’s tabernacle of financial wisdom and weaving the louche into your everyday life with an understated yet simultaneously supercilious air, he offers his commendation.
Essentially, this flight attendant, named Megan, details how whenever she enters a hotel room, she, among the litany of preventative meaures:
-Never places any bag or suitcase on the floor of the room;
-Only walks around her room in socks or flip-flops;
-Inspects the beds for bedbugs;
-If said bed is free of bedbugs, never touches the comforter;
-Disinfects the remote control; and
-Never uses the coffee maker or glassware.
Wow, what is Megan doing? Entering a goddamn biohazard level four laboratory at the fucking CDC? These, dear friends, perhaps, with the exception of checking for bedbugs (which, as I know from my junior year of college entomology class, are difficult to see with the naked eye, being, oh, a few millimeters in diameter) , are utterly ludicrous, alarmist, and downright delusional tips. I honestly shake my head at anyone who can sincerely advise people to inspect their hotel rooms in such a manner, and shudder to think that Megan would actually follow these tips herself, and actually believes them. It’s paranoia that rivals Howard Hughes, without the cachet of being an eccentric billionaire with an airplane called the Spruce Goose.
First, my question for Megan is, do you go outside? Into communal areas? Your own house? These areas are absolutely rife with bacteria, virii, and critters? What makes hotel rooms any more dangerous than a shuttle bus at the airport, the interior of an airplane, or your crew briefing room at your airline? Most healthy individuals, and, I assume because Megan is flying in an airplane for a region, she’s relatively healthy, are in possession of a a beautifully tuned immune system that is specifically designed to ward off billions of potential invaders without excessive preparation. Unless one is immuncompoimised, we, as humans, are designed to fight invaders at all times, in all environments. Megan, do you have any idea how much bacteria is simply on a piece of food, a desk, a doorknob, or in the air?
I’d be much more inclined to listen to Megan’s sensationalism if she could actually convince me that a hotel room was a markedly more virulent environment than most others. Yes, I fully concede that stories of unwashed glassware and bedbugs (again – my entomology professor said that no human should have to see what it looks like behind the boards affixed to the walls at the head of the beds after a bedbug infestation).
Many of these tips don’t offer any protection, whatsoever (uh, can bacterium or a virus not fit through fibers of your protective sock?) Can a bedbug not crawl up the leg of the luggage rack on which you so vehemently counsel people to place their luggage? And, some tips, ironically, only will serve to perpetrate the resistance and prevalence of bacteria in the future. Wiping down a remote with an antibacterial wipe has to be, without a doubt, one of the stupidest things I can imagine. A – most hotel remotes have been sitting for a while, in dry air, since someone last touched them. Most viruses do not survive long in the air (which, is why fluid contact is so often required for viral transmission). B – The paranoid overuse of bacterial wipes only helps us create drug resistant bacteria for the future, all in the name of wiping out some common, most likely harmless, bacterial colonies on the remote, anyway. Remember – when one uses antibacterial soap, wipes, or gel, there ain’t no way you’re obliterating all of the bacteria on that surface. The ones that survive, essentially, have survived the attack by the antibacterial agent, which, leads to evolution of drug resistance. It’s a very real threat. Methicillin-resistant bacteria are more prevalent than ever before in hospitals, and – well, we currently have no drug that treats a methcillin-resistant infection (See note at top of post for correction!). Sure, if you work in a hospital – as a trained professional of some sort – use all the antibacterial methods your hospital protocols require. But, I can only imagine the future because people have placed their trust in Lysol commercials, who over-dramatize bacterial colonies and make people think that our houses are rife with infection and should be feared. Great, years of drug resistant bacteria, all in the name of selling products, and in the name of a completely unfounded fear and rationale bereft of critical thinking that your remote contains botulism.
It’s simply quite difficult for me to justify how a hotel room is necessarily more dangerous than the inside of an airplane, or any area where people gather. These tips are absolutely insane.
Moreover, in terms of Gary Leff, I just can’t wrap my head around this guy. How can someone so consistently rationale, principled, calculating, and obsessed with safety (to the point of being a droning bore sometimes), advocate this garbage? This guy never ceases to befuddle. I just don’t understand.
Meanwhile, I’m going to go wipe down my remote, and fashion myself a protective body suit made of socks. Megan says it will protect me.

On point as usual, but we do in fact have ways of treating methicillin resistent infections. More than one drug in fact, vancomycin, linezolid, etc. But the point is well made none the less.
As previously mentioned, methicillin resistant organisms can be treated with antibiotics. MRSA is typically susceptible to vancomycin, bactrim, linezolid, clindamycin, and rifampin…of course depending on the sensitivity report.
Definitely made your point though…..people are germ-o-phobes and it hurts them in the long run.
Darn it, other medical experts have made the point that MRSA infections are susceptible to other antibiotics. One drug to remember, if you need to treat any bacterial infection ever: imipenem.
Thank-you for this! I wish I could have said it better, so I will just reference this post when needed.
Thanks so much for the corrections, folks! Oops – I meant vancomycin-resistant bacteria as instant (or somewhat prolonged) doom. My bad.
Corrections have been noted on the post. Thanks, again.
Great line:
“Wow, what is Megan doing? Entering a goddamn biohazard level four laboratory at the fucking CDC?”
People are so scared these days and Megan should stop flying. People who live there lives in cocoons are more prone to pick something up than people who live relaxed and are more exposed to what is out there.
Unfortunately Gray, even VRE and VRSA can be treated by imipenem, linezolid, dapsone, but it’s definitely not pleasant with some of the side effects and length of treatment.
@Iceman – Hmmm – I’m now at a loss! :p I simply cannot remember – my organic chemistry professor mentioned the type of resistant bacteria the first day, coupled with, “I’m sorry to say it, but, if you are infected with this type of resistant bacteria, you’re dead.” I thought it was vancomycin-resistant bacteria . . . but, I guess not. I will keep racking the ol’ brain.
I don’t think Megan is so crazy.
Do you remember this story on ABC News?
“Hotel guests may be surprised at what we found. Urine or semen stains were confirmed in every room we examined — including on the bedspreads, the blankets, the walls, carpet, a desk top, a table and on upholstered chairs. One astounding discovery was in a hotel in Los Angeles, where we found a urine stain on the Bible.”
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Health/story?id=1507794
@Gray: Your chem prof probably was talking about VRE, vancomycin-resistant enterococcus. However, I think the media has overblown its deadliness. Don’t get me wrong, it’s really really bad and antibiotic resistance is a bad thing. I was actually thinking about this earlier today in clinic, how would the anti-bacterial wipes cause antibiotic resistance? Most of those wipes are alcohol based and wouldn’t breed specific resistance.
On a broader note, I totally agree with you. This woman has taken the whole cleanliness thing overboard. 99.9% (and probably higher) of bacteria is harmless. They just get a bad rap.
So she likes to be clean! What is the big deal? People like you love to roll in your own germs, then sneeze and wipe your snotty nose with your hands and touch door knobs. So thanks for starting the H1N1!
I do not take things as far as Megan does, however, I find no harm in wiping down the remote, light switches, toilet handles and phone when I visit a hotel.
I like the smell, and it makes me feel better.