Should You Clean Your Phone to Combat Coronavirus? Definitely... Maybe.

July 19, 2024 TOTOODO

Is Your phone covered in germs? Absolutely. Should it be cleaned? Depend on whom you ask. If it makes you feel better, here are the best(and worst) ways to do it.

The world is on fire, but don't  you worry, I am here to tell you how to clean your smartphone.

That is, if you really want to clean your phone. Three people I spoke with over the past week said they did not clean their smartphones—and they are all leading experts on microbiology and infectious disease.

WAIT! WHAT? I thought smartphones were dirtier than a toilet bowl. Heck, even academic studies, like this one from my favorite bedtime reading, the Journal of Hospital Infection, have found considerable amounts of bacteria, including fecal matter, on phone screens.

And yet all these experts said some variation of the same thing when I asked about combating coronavirus: thoroughly clean your hands; don't touch your face; don't worry about your phone.

Sure, except what if you're one of those people where your smartphone is basically an extension of your hand? What if I touch a dirty subway pole, then touch my phone, then my phone touches my face? What if someone sneezes directly on my iPhone screen? What if I'm the kind of person who licks my phone? (Don't judge.) A recent study found that, on surfaces such as metal, glass or plastic, corona virus can survive for anywhere between two hours and nine days.

"It's possible, theoretically, for this to live on a smartphone. If you had it out and someone sneezed or coughed on it and then you handled the phone, you could pick up infection that way," says Daniel R. Kuritzkes, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Brigham and Women's Hospital. "People should keep their phones close to themselves. There is very little risk involved then."

"My phone is the least of my concerns," says Alex Berezow, a microbiologist and vice president at the American Council on Science and Health. "Worry about touching door handles that thousands of other people touch."

After days of disinfecting my phone like a surgical tray, I was shocked. Phone cleaning is certainly not as cut and dried as you thought. After hours of research and scrubbing phones with everything from Clorox wipes to Lysol toilet-bowl cleaner, I've come up with some basic lessons for what you can do and not do with that petri dish phone of yours.


Should I clean my smartphone?

Let's be very clear: Even when there isn't a pandemic sweeping thee globe, your phone can get dirty.

Generally, that filth is not an issue, says Emma Hayhurst, a microbiologist at the University of South Wales and co-author on the aforementioned Journal of Hospital Infection paper. "We were trying to avoid mass panic about mucky phones. When you are healthy, it's really not a problem."

Translation: You should clean your phone just not compulsively.

"We don't need to be obsessively washing our phones right now. If people are coming into contact with corona virus patients, then, yes. Wash your phone all the time. Not because there is evidence that it will transmit via a phone but because there is no evidence that it won't," says Dr. Hayhurst.

How should I clean my smartphone?

It's long been the guidance of Apple, Samsung and other phone makers to just use a microfiber cloth to shine up your device.

All my new infectious-disease friends, however, say that to effectively kill the virus on a surface, you need disinfectant solution for instance, something with at least 55% isopropyl alcohol.

On Monday, I reported that Apple updated its website to remove its blanket ban on all cleaning supplies. It now gives the OK to use a 70% isopropyl alcohol wipe or Clorox disinfecting wipe on the surface of all Apple products. Google also confirmed that it’s OK to use isopropyl alcohol or Clorox wipes to clean its Pixel devices.

After publication of this column, Samsung updated its cleaning guidance to include alcohol-based cleaners. It now advises Galaxy owners to dampen a cloth with a disinfectant or alcohol-based solution and wipe gently. It says not to apply liquid directly onto your phone.

Of course, the big question right now is, where do you BUY the wipes?

Can you use soap and water, as many have asked me? Sure, but avoid using rough paper towels or sponges on the screen. And never use bleach.


Can I damage my smartphone by cleaning it?

The big cleaning-solution fear cited by smartphone makers is damage to your phone screen's oleophobic layer. This is a protective coating on your screen that repels both water and oil. Basically, it helps minimize fingerprints and smudges.

"Cleaning products and abrasive materials will diminish the coating and might scratch your iPhone," Apple's website reads.

I took it upon myself to test that, as you'll see in the video above. Using a brand-new iPhone 8, I wiped the screen 1,095 times with Clorox disinfecting wipes. I figured that's the equivalent of wiping down your phone every day for the three years you might own it. The only thing showing any wear after all that wiping? My poor, wrinkly fingers. The coating still repelled drops of olive oil like it did when I first took it out of the box.

So I upped the effort. I was told that hydrochloric acid, found in toilet-bowl cleaner, would take it right off. Yet after five minutes of scrubbing, it was still fine. Soft Scrub with some bleach for five minutes? Still in decent shape. Finally, I decided to let it sit in a stew of toilet-bowl cleaner for two hours, then I threw in a five-minute rubdown with nail-polish remover, which has acetone. That did it...just about. (The phone, miraculously, still worked.). 


 Source: The Wall Street Journal

 https://www.wsj.com/articles/should-you-clean-your-phone-to-combat-coronavirus-definitely-maybe-11584018237?mod=e2fb


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