Posts Tagged ‘London’

World’s Longest Toilet Queue is in London with Gordon Brown in it!

Monday, March 29th, 2010


From c1Media, watch Gordon Brown interviewed while sitting on a toilet outside Parliament. He’s there with hundreds of look alikes. End Water Poverty sponsored the event.

To raise awareness of the plight of over 2.5 billion people who do not have access to clean water and basic sanitation, countries across the globe combined to attempt a Guinness World Record – the longest ever toilet queue! LYJA’s Cody, from St Hugh’s School in Grantham, was in the heart of London to report on an amazing spectacle.


For Your Convenience

Friday, November 27th, 2009


For Your Convenience made the shortlist for the Golden Poo Awards 2009.

Poo in Passing

Monday, November 23rd, 2009


Peter J. Speed’s animation Poo in Passing was shortlisted for the Golden Poo Awards 2009.

Why Wash?

Saturday, November 21st, 2009


That’s a question this animation finalist from the Golden Poo Awards 2009 will answer.

Are You Spreading Poo?

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009


The Golden Poo Awards 2009 gave Are You Spreading Poo? a Runner Up award. This is not for the faint of heart!

A Film About Poo is Number 2

Monday, November 9th, 2009


A Film About Poo takes second place in the Golden Poo Awards.

Dancing in the Loo: Golden Poo Awards First Place

Saturday, November 7th, 2009


Dancing in the Loo won first place in the Golden Poo Awards 2009.

From Great Britain: Northerners’ Hands Dirtier Than Southerners

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009


Colour_GHD09I’m in London, reading a disturbing article from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. The article is one-year old, so I am hoping that the coming and going of two Global Handwashing Day events has helped clean up the situation in Great Britain!

Here’s the article. Any advice for me? I’ve got a few more days here.

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The further north you go, the more likely you are to have faecal bacteria on your hands, especially if you are a man, according to a preliminary study conducted by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

But women living in the South and Wales have little to feel smug about. In London, they are three times as likely as their men folk to have dirty hands, and in Cardiff, twice as likely. The men of London registered the most impressive score among all those surveyed, with a mere 6% found to have faecal bugs on their hands. Overall more than one on four commuters have bacteria which come from faeces on their hands.

The Dirty Hands Study was conducted in order to provide a snapshot of the nation’s hand hygiene habits, as part of the world’s first Global Handwashing Day today. Commuters’ hands were swabbed at bus stops outside five train stations around the UK (Newcastle, Liverpool, Birmingham, Euston and Cardiff).

The results indicated that commuters in Newcastle were up to three times more likely than those in London to have faecal bacteria on their hands (44% compared to 13%) while those in Birmingham and Cardiff were roughly equal in the hand hygiene stakes (23% and 24% respectively). Commuters in Liverpool also registered a high score for faecal bacteria, with a contamination rate of 34%.

In Newcastle and Liverpool, men were more likely than women to show contamination (53% of men compared to 30% of women in Newcastle, and 36% of men compared to 31% of women in Liverpool), although in the other three centres, the women’s hands were dirtier. Almost twice as many women than men in Cardiff were found to have contamination (29% compared to 15 %) while in Euston, they were more than three times likelier than the men to have faecal bacteria on their hands (the men here registered an impressive 6%, compared to a rate of 21% in the women). In Birmingham, the rate for women was slightly higher than the men (26% compared to 21%).

The bacteria that were found are all from the gut, and do not necessarily always cause disease, although they do indicate that hands have not been washed properly.

Dr Val Curtis, Director of the Hygiene Centre at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, comments: ‘We were flabbergasted by the finding that so many people had faecal bugs on their hands. The figures were far higher than we had anticipated, and suggest that there is a real problem with people washing their hands in the UK. If any of these people had been suffering from a diarrhoeal disease, the potential for it to be passed around would be greatly increased by their failure to wash their hands after going to the toilet’.

For the source, see Northerners’ hands up to three times dirtier than those living in the South.

Don’t Miss the Golden Poo Awards

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009


GoldenPooAwardsThe Golden Poo Awards in London are held on October 15 to celebrate Global Handwashing Day. PooP Creative and the London International Animation Festival (LIAF) jointly promote a competition amongst film animators to produce short films, which tackle the serious issue of sanitation and / or hygiene in an edgy, irreverent and humorous way. These films are shortlisted for the event:

  • A Film About Poo – Emily Howells & Anne Wilkins
  • Dancing in the Loo – Delphine Mandin
  • For Your Convenience - Dan Castro
  • Poo In Passing – Peter J Speed
  • Are You Spreading Poo? - Rob and Tom Sears
  • Why Wash – Staffordshire University

Who will win?

We all win if you wash your hands!

“Handwashing with soap is among the most effective and inexpensive ways
to prevent diarrhoeal diseases and pneumonia, which are together responsible
for the deaths, of over 3.5m children before their 5th birthday, every year.”

“Although people around the world wash their hands with water, very few wash
their hands with soap at critical moments eg after going to the toilet, cleaning a
child or before handling or eating food. The challenge is to transform handwashing
with soap from an abstract good idea into an automatic behaviour performed in
homes, schools, workplaces and communities worldwide.”

“This would save more lives than any vaccine or medical intervention. Global
Handwashing Day
is the centrepiece of a week of activities that will mobilise
millions of people across five continents to wash their hands with soap.”