Why Laundry Expert Recommends Washing Your Sheets at Least Once a Week

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Washing your bedding is probably one of the most annoying tasks of the week. Most of us complain that cleaning the sheets requires undoing and redoing the bed, which no one wants to do any more than necessary. With this mindset, it’s easy to let your sheets slide for a week, then another, until finally it’s been a month and you’re thinking “Maybe I should clean them soon…”.

Well, we’re here to tell you that this seemingly harmless procrastination can have very serious (and dangerous) consequences for you.

Dog rolling on your bed spread.

Keeping your sheets clean is essential to staying healthy for more than one reason. When you sleep on your sheets at night, regardless of the season, you sweat. In fact, research has shown that the average person sweats about a pint of sweat each night. That means that sweat and a lot of other gross stuff gets absorbed into your sheets every night.

Mary Marlowe Leverette, laundry expert for About.com, shared this pleasant anecdote about the reality of your dirty sheets:

“During sleep, we continue to perspire, and body oils and soil are released. It is possible to find saliva, urine, genital fluids, and fecal matter in the fibers. If the [linens] are not washed regularly, and the occupant has scratches or wounds, they can be come infected. Athlete’s foot and other fungi can be transferred from fabrics. Infrequent cleaning of sheets and pillowcases allows the fluids to seep into the pillows and mattresses, and those are MUCH more difficult to clean than tossing sheets in the washer.”

And it just gets worse. The flakes of skin you lose on your sheets each night attracts dust mites, microscopic bugs that live on the fibers of your sheets and feast on human flesh. That sounds great, doesn’t it?Dust mite gif.

While dust mites eat your dead skin flakes, they’re also excreting in your sheets; and their excrement has been known to cause asthma and allergies. According to Leverette, this can be serious for people with existing breathing problems:

“The excrement of the mites can cause breathing problems for those with allergies and asthma, but can easily be removed by washing in hot water. By not washing linens frequently, the oils and fluids build up and embed in the fibers, making them much more difficult to remove. If you have ever pulled some sheets from the linen closet, and they smell slightly rancid and stale, that is body soil left in the fibers because the sheets were not cleaned thoroughly.”

The only way to avoid these health risks is to do the one chore no one wants to do: wash your sheets. Once a week is the recommended frequency for washing. Leverette advises:

“Ideally, bed linens should be washed every week using the hottest water recommended for the fabric. If the weather is extremely hot, and the sleepers perspire heavily or the sleepers are ill, more frequent washings are recommended.”

What do you think about this unfortunate truth?

How often do you wash your sheets?