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Seventh Generation Disinfecting Bathroom Cleaner Lemongrass Citrus -- 26 fl oz


Seventh Generation Disinfecting Bathroom Cleaner Lemongrass Citrus
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Seventh Generation Disinfecting Bathroom Cleaner Lemongrass Citrus -- 26 fl oz

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Seventh Generation Disinfecting Bathroom Cleaner Lemongrass Citrus Description

  • Seventh Generation Disinfecting Spray Bathroom Cleaner Kills 99.99% of Bacteria and Viruses
  • Disinfecting Spray Foaming Nozzle to Tackle Bathroom Messes on Tub, Toilet, Shower, and Sink
  • Bathroom Disinfectant Cleaner Leaves Bathroom Smelling Fresh and Clean, No Rinsing Required
  • Botanical Disinfectant with the Active Ingredient Thymol (a Component of Thyme Oil
  • Disinfectant Cleaner With Lemongrass Citrus Scent Made with Essential Oils and Botanical Extracts
  • Caring Today for the Next Seven Generations; Try our Disinfectant Wipes and other Household Products
  • Safer Choice
  • Certified B Corp

The place we go to get clean should be clean, right? Seventh Generation Disinfecting Spray Bathroom Cleaner kills 99.99% of household germs botanically, including cold and flu viruses. Our foaming bathroom cleaner is designed to disinfect. It is formulated without the use of bleach or synthetic fragrances.

 

Our Disinfectant Cleaner is scented with essential oils and botanical ingredients and leaves your bathroom smelling fresh and clean. This EPA registered disinfectant and deodorizer can be used around kids and pets and is suitable for use on all hard non-porous surfaces in the bathroom, including toilet, tub, shower, sink, and more. Try all of our Seventh Generation cleaners; Wood Cleaner, Stone Cleaner, Granite Cleaner, Glass Cleaner and window cleaner, Toilet Bowl Cleaner, disinfecting wipes and our various disinfectant cleaner products.

 

A partnership with the CleanWell Company, makers of the disinfectant formula based on an essential oil, brings you a line of Seventh Generation Disinfecting Cleaners with CleanWell Inside. Kills 99.99% of household germs, specifically: Influenza A virus, H1N1, Rhinovirus type 37 (the Common Cold virus), Staphylococcus aureus, Salmonella enterica, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli on hard, nonporous surfaces.

 

At Seventh Generation, we do business differently. We believe our products are healthy solutions for use within your home–and for the community and environment outside it. We are always evaluating how to reduce their environmental impact, increase performance and safety, and create a more sustainable supply chain. Not only that, but we believe it is our responsibility to set a course for a more mindful way of doing business, where companies act as partners with other stakeholders to create a brighter future for the whole planet.

 

Seventh Generation is proud to be a Certified B Corporation. B Corps are certified to be better for workers, better for communities, and better for the environment. By choosing Seventh Generation products, you’re joining us in nurturing the health of the next seven generations.


Directions

It is a violation of Federal law to use this product in a manner inconsistent with its labeling. For heavily soiled or greasy areas, pre-cleaning is required.

To Clean: Wet the surface with the spray and wipe clean. For stubborn stains, let stand for a few minutes. Allow to penetrate, then wipe clean.

To Disinfect: 1) Wet the surface by sprayer (spot test to check compatibility). 2) Leave for 10 minutes. Allow to air-dry. No rinsing or wiping is required, even on food contact surfaces.

 

Storage and Disposal

Nonrefillable container. Store airtight at room temperature. Do not reuse or refill this empty container. Offer empty container for recycling. If recycling is not available, discard in trash.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Ingredients: Water, sodium, lauryl sulfate, copper sulfate pentahydrate (bluestone), citric acid, sodium citrate, and essential oil fragrance (organum vulgare, cymbopogon nardus, cumbopogon schoenanthus). Citral is a component of these essential oils.
The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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7 Surprising Places Germs Lurk

You may think you know all the usual places where germs like to hang—the toilet for one, as well as those pesky sponges that are so difficult to disinfect completely. But there’s a fair amount of places the germs like to congregate that may take you by surprise.

I know I was not only surprised, but mortified.

7 Surprising Places Germs Lurk

Every story one writes contains an implicit call to action. Some of those calls to actions are easy to ignore, others—not so much. Full disclosure that in writing this story I often had to stop and immediately put into practice some of these tips, such as disinfecting my washing machine by running it through with bleach. Read on to discover some of the germs you have been inadvertently hosting, and be forewarned that you might have to declare war on them before you even finish this article.

Germ Hotspot #1: Washing machines

Although we think of our washing machine as a hotbed of sanitization, it may be contaminating your clothing and linens. Some of this is the rise of using cold or warm water for loads instead of hot, and shorter, eco-conscious washing cycles. For loads with lots of underwear, which can contain approximately 100 million E. coli (and can then cross-contaminate the next load of laundry), it might be prudent to do some loads with hot water—at least once in a while. But sometimes it’s hard to reconcile the urge to germ-bust with the urge to reduce our footprint and I struggle with this issue myself.

Clean it tip: Clean your washing machine with bleach and water without any clothing in it and just let the machine go through its regular cycle. (Doing this as write.)

Germ Hotspot #2: Towels

Towels, which are moist and damp, make for a perfect bacteria breeding ground.

Sharing towels can spread MRSA, a dangerous staph infection that is resistant to many antibiotics. Also alarming: acne-causing bacteria can also be spread among family members from towel sharing.

Clean it tip: Make sure towels air out quickly after each use. If you don’t have a rack or hooks, consider spreading them out over a stand-up or wall-mounted rack. You can also line dry towels in the sun, weather permitting, or put a load of towels in the dryer after everyone has bathed and showered. Finally, every once in a while launder towels in hot water and bleach. If they still smell mildew, may be time to buy some new towels. Don’t forget to include your hand and face towels, which are equally suspect.

Germ Hotspot #3: Oven Knobs

Somehow oven knobs seem relatively innocent of germs, but according to recent research from NSF International, a public health organization, 14 percent of knobs had coliform bacteria, while 27 percent harbored molds and yeasts.

Clean it tip: Weekly or at least monthly, remove the knobs and wash in hot, soapy water.

Germ Hotspot #4: Cutting boards

Researchers at the University of Arizona found that in the average household, cutting boards have 200 times more fecal bacteria that the average toilet seat. Yikes!

The study also showed that 18 percent harbor potentially dangerous coliform bacteria and 14 percent contain molds and yeasts.

Clean it tip: After every use, place boards in the dishwasher or hand-wash with hot soapy water. If your cutting board is very scoured, it may be time to replace. Germs, apparently, just love to nestle in those tiny grooves.

Germ Hotspot #5: Refrigerators

The erroneous assumption regarding fridges is that bacteria won’t grow in cold temps. Not true. A recent study in England found fridge salad drawers, for example, can contain 750 times the level of bacteria considered safe. But scrubbing the inside of your fridge isn’t enough. The University of Arizona study also found that of 160 homes in three US cities, the seal around the fridge tested positive 83 percent of the time for common molds. The mold can spread every time the refrigerator door opens—potentially contaminating the food.

Clean it tip: Do a weekly fridge wipe-down and a once-a-month deep clean where you take everything out, toss any spoiled food, wipe down all surfaces and scrub removable shelves in sudsy hot water. Don’t forget to wipe those fridge seals with a diluted bleach solution or disinfectant too.

Germ Hotspot #6: Computer keyboards

Get ready for it: There are about 200 times more bacteria on a keyboard than a toilet seat—possibly because we never think to disinfect our keyboards.

Clean it tip: Wash your hands, and your desk area, and keyboard, often.

Germ Hotspot #7: Faucets

Since you can’t wash your hands before you turn on your faucet, it’s a logical though painful realization that research found coliform bacteria on nine percent of bathroom faucet handles and that 27 percent had molds and five percent carried staph. In another survey conducted by the Hygiene Council, kitchen faucet handles carried more than 13,000 bacteria per square inch and bathroom faucet handles had more than 6,000 bugs per square inch. This is much higher than other spots in your home.

Clean it tip: Clean faucet handles daily with disinfectant wipes or spray.

Don’t despair after reading about these sneaky germ havens—or become a fundamentalist germaphobe. Simply channel all that angst into spring-cleaning by putting a “I can” attitude into all that spick-and-span. Your house will gleam, and a lot of bacteria will find themselves homeless.

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