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If you're drinking a fountain beverage from a restaurant right now, you probably want to skip to the next blog entry. You've been warned. A team of microbiologists from Hollins University in Roanoke, Virginia have conducted one of those studies that we never -- ever -- like to hear about. They discovered coliform and fecal coliform bacteria and other "opportunistic pathogenic microorganisms" present in more than half of all restaurant soda machines.
Fecal coliform bacteria is exactly what it sounds like.
In other words, if the beef doesn't make you sick from the bacteria and the ammonia used to clean the processed beef filler, the soda might come back to haunt you with "episodic gastric distress."
According to the study, pathogens ranging from
E. coli to
Chryseobacterium meningosepticum, which is a bacteria that causes infections such as meningitis and pneumonia, were discovered on the commonly used soda dispensers. They also discovered
Klebsiella, Staphylococcus, Stenotrophomonas, Candida, and
Serratia.
Oh, and it gets worse. The strains of bacteria were resistant to 11 different antibiotics.
Comment: There is an even greater risk than "gastric distress" by consuming high-fructose corn syrup. See: Sugar coated / We're drowning in high fructose corn syrup. Do the risks go beyond our waistline?