Airport National Security is Unhygienic
Posted on March 22, 2005
While we all think of the inconvenience of removing our shoes these days before boarding planes how many have considered the health implications of this mass shoe removal? Dr. Cecil Fox recently raised the question on the ProMed newsletter.
Dr. Cecil Fox said, "Having spent some time with mycotic infections, I am startled to see that the Transportation Security Administration, who supposedly monitors airports, 'strongly' suggests that passengers remove their shoes while passing through the lines in American airports. The penalty for not doing so is an intimidating delay in which a total body scan for such contraband as glasses frames and wrist watches is conducted, whereupon you still are required to remove your shoes and to stand around on unkempt airport carpets while your shoes are X-rayed! If you do as 'suggested,' you must march 10 to 15 feet either barefoot or in stocking feet to a point where one's shoes may be reclaimed. This is evidently because a demented passenger attempted to ignite his shoes with either matches or a cigarette lighter, already prohibited. Unless I am terribly mistaken, one's flora are being mixed with that of several hundreds of thousand of passengers who have passed through the same lines. The floors are rarely cleaned (evidently) and never disinfected. Has simple hygiene been forfeited in the US in the name of 'security?' When the TSA finally answered a query, they told me that OSHA had approved the cross contamination of hundreds of thousands of feet. The CDC, NIH, WHO, or state or local health departments were not consulted. National Security indeed."
If you think Dr. Fox is correct and this sounds like an obvious health risk -- it is. At a minimum those floors should be disinfected a few times a day.
ProMED followed up by saying, "the people at highest risk must obviously be airport security staff. Studies documenting increased risk of dermatophytes and/or tinea pedis, and increased risk of respiratory tract symptoms like asthma or allergic alveolitis, is clearly highly needed."