Bacteria are carried by various media which can include raw food moist surfaces where bacteria has been.
What happens if you eat food off the floor.
Bacteria are carried by various media which can include raw food moist surfaces where bacteria has been.
The usual warnings apply.
If you are unlucky enough to host salmonella bacteria on your floor dropped food could make you.
And it s not just dropping food on the floor that can lead to bacterial contamination.
No it s never a good idea to eat food that has been dropped.
But it depends on what you drop and where.
And foods with wet surfaces like an apple slice pick up bacteria even more easily than things like a cookie.
Occasionally eating food that was briefly on the floor is not likely to make you sick.
Aaron e carroll indiana university s professor of pediatrics says he eats food that s been on the floor rejecting the advice of a recent study that suggests food dropped on the floor will pick.
Even food that s picked up quickly can be contaminated.
The only thing that matters when food is dropped is how sticky it is.
And it s not just dropping food on the floor that can lead to bacterial contamination.
The 5 second rule is just wishful thinking bacteria can attach to food as soon as it hits the floor.
It s all about bacteria when you drop a piece of food on the floor any bacteria living on the floor will adhere to it.
So if you eat the food you ve dropped you re also eating any.
You could become ill regardless of whether you ate food from the floor.
E coli can cause diarrhoea and urinary tract.
There s a big difference between picking up a cracker from a just cleaned dry kitchen floor probably safe versus the floor near the cat litter box not.
The five second rule which states that as long as dropped food is picked up within five seconds of hitting the floor it s safe to eat.