Hundreds of Different Viruses Are on Your Toothbrush and Shower Head

Every time you set foot in your bathroom, you’re probably sharing the space with hundreds of different viruses that lurk on surfaces like your toothbrush and shower head, a new study suggests.

For the study, scientists asked people to submit used toothbrushes and swabs with samples collected from their shower heads. Researchers then used DNA sequencing to analyze these samples in a lab — and found more than 600 different viruses, according to findings published in Frontiers in Microbiomes.

While this sounds gross, and might have you reaching for the bleach to sanitize everything in sight, there’s no need to panic, says senior study author Erica Hartmann, PhD, an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.

“Microbes are everywhere, and the vast majority of them will not make us sick,” Dr. Hartmann says. “The more you attack them with disinfectants, the more they are likely to develop resistance or become more difficult to treat. We should all just embrace them.”

Viruses That Attack Bacteria

What scientists found in the lab belong to a category of viruses called bacteriophages, which don’t infect people. Instead, bacteriophages target bacteria — including lots of organisms that can cause serious and potentially life-threatening human diseases.