How to train in the gym: top tips!

A healthy gym routine can help you avoid common germs that can lead to illness.

While germs can be contracted at the gym, the risks do not outweigh the benefits of a good workout.

Practising good hand washing hygiene, covering cuts and breaks in the skin, wearing shoes, cleaning equipment before and after use, and bringing towels and mats can help keep germs away.

Surely fitness gyms will reopen in a few months! Sometimes, it is difficult just to get to the gym. Once you are there, the last thing you have to worry about is coming into contact with dangerous germs.

In

fact, according to a survey of over 1,000 gym-goers

of gyms, sanitary practices were the biggest pet issues

pets of the respondents, with the following topping their list:

More than half of the

gym goers observed that bathroom users do not wash their

their hands and continue to use gym equipment.

Thirty-five per cent

of men admitted that they never clean their weights after using them,

while more than 25 per cent of women admitted that they never

swept cardio equipment.

38.4 per cent

of gym-goers fail to clean their equipment in the

afternoon while 21.2 per cent fail to do so in the late evening.

‘È

really important to go to the gym and be healthy and people

don’t (have to) worry about getting sick … keeping them from the gym. I

health benefits are great and the risk of infection is quite

low for most people,’ Dr. Nirav Patel, medical director of the gymnasium, told Healthline.

Nirav Patel, medical director at the University of New

Orleans.

However,

Patel said there are some germs to be aware of so that you can

you can properly safeguard yourself.

Staph bacteria

Infections

by staphylococcus and MRSA

can live on gym equipment such as machines, free weights and

mats, as well as on towels, benches and in changing rooms.

‘If

want to protect yourself, clean equipment using wipes or antibacterial sprays

provided by gyms or use your towel as a barrier between you and

the equipment,’ Patel said.

Jason

Tetro, microbiologist and host of ‘Super Awesome Science Show’, agreed

agreed, but said that people do not regularly clean equipment

equipment before and after use, it’s a good idea to take other preventative measures.

‘Make sure

that all wounds are covered before you start training. This

will help reduce the chances of skin infection. Do your

best not to touch your face after touching a surface. This

can reduce the chances of introducing a potential pathogen,’ he told

Tetro to Healthline.

He

added: ‘When you’re done, take a shower with soap shortly after exercising to remove any germs that might have come in.

exercising to remove any germs that may have come onto your

skin while you were exercising. Also, make sure your clothes are

washed and dried regularly. ’

Fungal infections

Athlete’s foot

and itching are often caused by a group of fungi called

dermatophytes, which can also cause ringworm. They can be acquired

from the locker room environment.

‘The

athlete’s food is caused by fungi that live everywhere but are associated

with damp, humid and wet environments,’ Patel said.

Change

wet clothes and then airing and washing them when you get home is a good

hygienic practice, Patel said.

‘Change

your shoes frequently so that they have a chance to

to air out,’ Patel added. ‘Wearing materials that

absorb moisture can help sweat evaporate, so it’s not causing

a damp and humid environment, and walking on the gym floor in your

shoes instead of bare feet can help prevent those fungi.’

I

viruses

The

plantar warts are caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV) and usually

develop on the heels or feet.

‘Do not

walk [barefoot] on damp, wet environments where it lives. Take a

shower and rinse with clean water,’ Patel said.

Herpes

gladiator herpes, also known as opaque herpes, is caused by the herpes virus

simplex type 1.

‘It comes

from Roman-era fighters who would get herpes because they were

fighting in close contact with each other,’ Patel said.

The

athletes who participate in contact sports today can still contract herpes

matt.

‘Avoid

shared equipment and towels and using your own clean things is

important in this situation,’ Patel said.

The viruses

airborne respiratory viruses are another concern in gyms, he

observed Tetro.

‘While

people should not go to the gym when they are sick, it is difficult to

to stop them. If you happen to see someone coughing, sneezing or

showing general signs of shedding, you might want to avoid that area at least

a minute after the person has left. You also want to clean

the equipment to make sure you don’t pick up viruses from surfaces and

sending them into the respiratory tract by touching the face,’ Tetro said.

Patel

suggested intervening with the sick person.

‘If

someone in a class is coughing and sneezing and not performing good etiquette for

the cough, then you can ask them to take steps to cover up the

cough or give them a Kleenex or hand sanitiser. Or, go

to the other side of the room or use other equipment,’ he said. ‘But

this could be the case in any public environment … not just in the

gym.’

For

regarding drinking from public fountains or coffee pots and eating snacks

offered at the gym: ‘I’m not terribly worried about that. The

food and drinks are generally kept at a reasonable hygiene level,’

said Patel.

However,

if you plan to drink or eat refreshments provided by the gym,

you should practise common sense. If cups and plates look dirty or

as if they haven’t been rinsed in a while, use a disposable cup

disposable cup or bring your own reusable cup.

‘I tell

many people during the cold and flu season to

undergo flu and practice good hand hygiene. The

most of the time, you have the flu not because someone sneezed in your

your face, but because you touched something or you are around people who cough or

sneezing constantly, so when you pick up that

phone or touch the door handle and touch your face without good

hand hygiene, [you contract the disease],’ Patel said.

Conclusions

While the

germs can be contracted at the gym, the risks do not outweigh the benefits of

a good workout.

‘The

risk that people take simply by going to the gym is sometimes

exaggerated because of the one story we hear in the news, but that does not

mean that it happens all the time. At the same time, people die

every day from heart disease and going to the gym helps with that,’ said

stated Patel.

Practice

good hand hygiene, cover cuts and breaks in the skin, wear

shoes, cleaning the equipment before and after use and bringing towels and

mats can help keep germs away.

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