First, I divided my petri dish into six sections. For the first section, I swabbed a portion of my finger and streaked the petri dish with it. Then I put my swab in alcohol and swabbed a different finger, again streaking the petri dish with the swab. Then I washed my hands with soap and swabbed another finger, applying it to the petri dish once again. Next, I tested a water fountain at the school. I swabbed it once with distilled water, once with an alcohol tip, and once with bleach. Everytime I streaked the petri dish with the swab. After about 72 hours, I had growth in my dish. Growth was low with my skin control, none with my alcohol section, and moderate with my soap section. In my surface sections: the control had low growth, and the alcohol and bleach sections had no growth at all.
I concluded that the best disinfectants for surfaces are alcohol and bleach. The least effective is water. The best antiseptic is alcohol. Soap had the least effect, so I conclude that it is the least effective antiseptic. It's also nice to know that our water fountains are clean! Good job janitors! =)
Things that could have effected or scewed the results of my experiments: the janitors clean the fountain everyday, I was not able to dry my hands after washing them, and the length of time I washed my hands was not recorded.
super!
ReplyDelete