Antibacterial Essays

  • Antibacterial Soap

    1213 Words  | 3 Pages

    Antibacterial Soap Dial antibacterial soap advertises that it is "over 10x more effective at killing disease-causing germs than ordinary liquid hand soaps"(1). To the average consumer a soap with the ability to kill more germs seems to be more effective. But is a more powerful antibacterial soap always better? Various studies suggest that antibacterial soaps can be harmful and may lead to problems like super bugs, dry skin, and hand eczema. According to current research antibacterial soaps are

  • The Drawbacks to Antibacterial Soap Use

    2511 Words  | 6 Pages

    and use antibacterial products so that should be enough to keep the virus away right? Wrong. In actuality, this practice may lead to a worse case altogether as such products can be the cause of outbreaks, much less the remedy. Soap infused with supposedly bacteria killing agents have only arisen in consumption in the last fifty to one hundred years at most. Statistics now show that such products take up around 70% of the shelf space in stores.1 Despite this drastic increase in antibacterial soap products

  • Antibacterial Soap Does More Harm than Good

    1327 Words  | 3 Pages

    many people have increased their usage of antibacterial soaps in hope that they will avoid getting sick or becoming ill. Antibacterial products are include Plastic bags hand soap, toothpaste, personal care products detergents & cleaning products and the list continues. However, lately these products are doing more harm than help for those who use them in everyday life. Studies have surfaced that antibiotic resistant bacteria have increased. Antibacterial soaps originally were used in the hospitals

  • Garlic

    1527 Words  | 4 Pages

    passing him (Grieve 1995). However, garlic is very important in many cultures for their cuisine. What would Chinese or Italian food be without garlic? And its long history of medicinal uses are now being backed up by numerous studies proving its antibacterial and healing powers. Center of Origin of Garlic Garlic is believed to have originated in western China from around the Tien Shan Mountains to Kazakhstan and Kirgizstan. Vvedenskv proposed that garlic evolved from the wild species Allium longicuspus

  • Kimchi Journal

    808 Words  | 2 Pages

    more than my stomach and breath can handle. Scientists from Seoul National University came out with a study a few days ago stating that a lactic enzyme in kimchi has remedial effects on chicken and other types of poultry. I assume kimchi's "antibacterial powers" have kept my family and I clean from this epidemic. With what I could understand from the Korean news, the bird flu is extremely infectious to organisms such as poultry. I went on the Center for Disease Control website to get a much more

  • Cold Pasteurization can Change the World

    1512 Words  | 4 Pages

    Irradiation is a ‘magic bullet’ that will enable [the company] to say that the product was ‘clean’ when it left the packing plant (OCA, 2001). The claim, more rather, lacks the key source in evidence, for even the best sanitation and standard antibacterial treatments cannot ensure safety in foods. In addition, irradiation cannot occur properly if the food is too heavily contaminated, preventing industries from using this practice as a substitution for good sanitation practices. Irradiation is not

  • american gods

    654 Words  | 2 Pages

    crooks and I still believe that they are better than the alternative. I believe that California is going to sink into the sea when the big one comes, while Florida is going to dissolve into madness and alligators and toxic waste. I believe that antibacterial soap is destroying our resistance to dirt and disease so that one day we’ll all be wiped out by the common cold like the Martians in War of the Worlds. I believe that the greatest poets of the last century were Edith Sitwell and Don Marquis, that

  • Purell Antibacterial Soap

    1372 Words  | 3 Pages

    There are tons of brands of antibacterial soaps in the soap industry, and some of them have a 99.99% chance of killing germs. There is one question most likely surrounding these brands: Do they actually work, and work effectively? This is the main question revolving around my experiment. Determining the effectiveness of 4 different soaps (Purell, Softsoap, Dial, and germ-X) will show how helpful these soaps really help us human beings. ​The Purell antibacterial soap brand is a great soap that claims

  • Antibacterial Soap Essay

    917 Words  | 2 Pages

    raising the awareness of maintaining cleanliness and hygiene to the public. Antibacterial products were introduced to prevent infection towards illnesses to kill and prevent the invasion and spread of bacteria. According to the FDA, antibacterial soap is a product that contains chemicals which help in killing bacteria (“Antibacterial Soap? You Can Skip It…”, n.d.). Healthcare companies heavily advertised these antibacterial soaps for their bacteria prevention benefits, convincing the public of its

  • Soap

    534 Words  | 2 Pages

    Antibacterial soap has been a product on the market that people have trusted for many years to knock out germs and keep them from getting sick. New data, research, and rules that are surfacing have the potential to change the product’s popularity. Antibacterial soap is ineffective and should be taken off of the market because the chemicals in it can be harmful, too much exposure can cause resistance to antibiotics, and it has not been proven to have more of an effect than regular soap and water

  • Antibacterial Soap Essay

    1014 Words  | 3 Pages

    Soap is a cleaning used for the cleaning and washing of the body using water. The main element of soap is natural oils, but companies looking for a profit add other things such as scent and coloring agent to sell more. Antibacterial soap is a manmade creation that specifically targets bacteria from chemicals that are added manually. The chemical that are added purpose is to destroy any bacteria that it comes in contact with, but anti-bacterial soap is not able to neutralize

  • Antibacterial Products: A Silent Disaster

    836 Words  | 2 Pages

    benefit, and no harms, then you should likely use it. But if something has no benefits and potentially real harms, then you shouldn’t. The latter is the case with antibacterial products". (Carroll par. 1) The users of antibacterial products do not realize the harms of such, harms which overpower the benefits. When the first antibacterial product, Penicillin, was invented in 1928 it was called a miracle. (Online Textbook of Bacteriology pgs. 1-4) Deaths and illness were exponentially reduced, and penicillin

  • Antibacterial Properties of Essential Oils

    538 Words  | 2 Pages

    Prisint stady pruvis thet, cotras fraot jaocis eri griet entomocruboel egints egeonst cirteon mocruurgenosm end thiy cen bi asid es midoconi fur trietmint uf bectiroel onfictouns. Thi tists uf entomocruboel ectovoty end thi MIC esseys shuwid prumosong risalts thet frish cotras fraot jaocis eri guud on kollong bectiroe. (Bensudi.DS it el., IRJP 2012) Limun os uni uf thi Femoly Rateciei. It os priperid promeroly fur ots elkeluods, whoch hevong entocencir ectovotois end thi entobectiroel prupirtois

  • Is Regular Soap Effective As Antibacterial Soap

    1124 Words  | 3 Pages

    different kinds of hand soaps. I look forward to taking you on this journey of my experiment process. Slide 2.) Is regular soap just as effective as antibacterial soap at getting rid of microbes? The reasoning behind this question is to see which soap removes the most microbes. Also, to see if regular soap removes just as many much microbes as antibacterial soap does. Slide 3.) This slide also explains why I want to do this experiment and that is to compare the effectiveness of each soap. Slide 4.)

  • Honey Informative Speech

    855 Words  | 2 Pages

    scientific research conducted by the American Medical Association, natural honey contains anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties. C. Ever since I moved to Oregon, I started to suffer from seasonal allergies. I took different medications but the side effects would make me feel tired and depressed. Every year my

  • Acinetobacter Baumannii Case Study

    1116 Words  | 3 Pages

    A.1. Statement of problem: Acinetobacter baumannii (A. baumannii) is a nosocomial, gram-negative bacterium commonly associated with pneumonia, meningitis, bacteremia, wound and urinary tract infections [1,2,25]. These bacteria are capable of preventing desiccation allowing it to thrive before prolong periods on various wet or dry surfaces. As an opportunistic human pathogen, A. baumannii may colonize a patient without causing any infections or symptoms, especially in tracheostomy sites or open

  • Effects of Chemicals on the Environment

    1208 Words  | 3 Pages

    The effects from chemicals , detergents and soaps have been linked to breast cancer. The chemicals used in everyday cleaning products have been linked to breast cancer, fertility problems, hormone disruption, asthma and other serious health problems. Many of these products are made with dangerous chemicals that have the potential to disrupt the endocrine system, also known as the hormone system. This system is responsible for the brain, development of the nervous system, reproduction

  • Argumentative Essay On Antibiotic Resistance

    1336 Words  | 3 Pages

    Antibiotic Resistance: Is it the Defeat of Modern Medicine? What if there were no treatment for strep throat? Or pneumonia? Or sinus infections? It is hard to imagine life without medicine for these illnesses. But what if the antibiotics used to treat bacterial infections such as strep throat and pneumonia stopped working? What if the bacteria were stronger than the antibiotics? The threat of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections is an increasing concern for healthcare providers, and it is important

  • Ficus Sycomorus Case Study

    944 Words  | 2 Pages

    purposes. The presence of these phytochemicals in the extract may be responsible for the antioxidant potential of the leaf by scavenging free radicals leading to the inhibition of erythrocytes hemolysis, hemagglutination and bacterial activity. The antibacterial activity of the leaf extract against the test organisms supports its utilization in traditional medicine practice for the treatment of various

  • Apple Cider Vinegar: A Natural Eczema Treatment

    913 Words  | 2 Pages

    malic acids, which have potent antibacterial and anti-fungal properties which soothe the dry skin, skin infections, inflammation, and itchiness. Yet, note that it should not be applied directly on the skin. Therefore,