Holy Water May be Harmful to Your Health, Study Finds
By LIZ FIELDS
| Good Morning America – 8
hours ago
Despite its purported cleansing properties, holy water could
actually be more harmful than healing, according to a new Austrian study on
"holy" springs.
Researchers at the Institute
of Hygiene and Applied Immunology
at the Medical University
of Vienna tested water from 21 springs in Austria and 18 fonts in Vienna and found samples contained up to 62
million bacteria per milliliter of water, none of it safe to drink.
Tests indicated 86 percent of the holy water, commonly used in baptism
ceremonies and to wet congregants' lips, was infected with common bacteria
found in fecal matter such as E. coli, enterococci and Campylobacter, which can
lead to diarrhea, cramping, abdominal pain, and fever.
Nitrates, commonly found in fertilizer from farms, were also identified in
the water. If ingested, water containing nitrates over the maximum contaminant
level could cause serious illness, especially in infants younger than 6 months,
which could lead to death if untreated, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
"We need to warn people against
drinking from these sources," said Dr Alexander Kirschner, study researcher and
microbiologist at the Medical University of Vienna.
The study, published in the Journal of
Water and Health, also found that all church and hospital chapel fonts
contained bacteria
-- the busier the church, the higher the bacterial count.
"This may represent a problem that has hitherto been underestimated,
especially in hospitals, since there a lot of people with weakened immune
systems there," Kirschner said.
There have been advances made for the
more hygienic use of holy water, including the invention of a holy water dispenser
a few years ago by an Italian priest, while studies have also indicated that
adding salt (at recommended levels of 20 percent) can help disinfect the water.
But Kirschner cautions that salt is not a reliable way to prevent infection
and instead recommends priests regularly change the holy water in churches and
erect signs to inform congregants about the dangers as well as of the history
of the holy springs.
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