If you've ever gone to a swimming pool
you may be familiar with the pool smell.
You know, the one. It's tingy and kind of
tingles your nose when you catch a whiff
of it. The sweet smell of chlorine.
I'm smiling because that's not a good sign.
It's a sign people have been doing a bit
more than just swimming. Scientists from
the University of Alberta calculated
that one commercial-sized swimming pool
contained almost twenty gallons of urine,
even though Michael Phelps told the
Wall Street Journal,
"I think everybody pees in
the pool.
Chlorine kills it so it's not bad."
Chlorine doesn't exactly work like that.
Peeing in pools is gross and it can make
people sick too.
A healthy pool has little or no chemical
smell; if you if you have a chemical
smell in the pool, you probably have what
we call "chloramines."
Chloramines are
formed when cleaning agents like
chlorine mix with organic compounds.
We're talking sweat, dirt, body oils, and
yes, urine. It can irritate the skin, lungs,
and eyes. The more urine, sweat, and other
organic materials in a pool, the less
efficient chlorine is at killing the
real nasty stuff.
Pool disinfectants work by destroying a
pathogen's membrane and proteins.
Chlorine is effective against many germs, but not
everything is killed instantly.
While it can kill E. coli within a minute,
it can take over seven days for chlorine
to penetrate the cell wall of
Cryptosporidium.
Our biggest cause of
outbreaks is Cryptosporidium.
Cryptosporidium is a parasite that
causes prolonged watery diarrhea, we're
talking about diarrhea for two to three
weeks in otherwise healthy people.
Left to their own devices, bacteria can start
to colonize and grow into something more.
Biofilm can potentially be found on any
surface that's been wet. It's bacteria
that's accumulated so much it creates
his own protective layer against
chlorine and other disinfectants.
Between 2000 and 2014 there were 493 outbreaks
reported from treated recreational waters.
Besides not swallowing the water,
there are a couple of ways to be safer
and make pools less gross.
Knowing if
there's enough chlorine in the water is
a good first step.
There's free test
strips available at healthypools.org.
for pools and other swimming areas and
interactive fountains or water
playgrounds where you see that water
shooting out of the concrete, we
recommend at least one part per million
or milligram per liter.
If you're sick or
have been sick two weeks prior, stay away
from the pool.
Take a quick shower before
swimming and just don't pee in the pool.
