Skip to main content

Hand-washing expert’s scanner shows you all the spots you may have missed

Christine Schindler, the CEO and co-founder of PathSpot, might be the world’s only “hand-washing expert.” Now, as coronavirus turns the world upside down and experts advise that hand-washing may be our best defense, Schindler’s unusual expertise — and the device she invented — have taken on new importance.

With a background in public health and biomedical engineering, Schindler started her career in Tanzania, where she developed low-cost medical devices to test for illnesses like breast or cervical cancer. When she moved back to the U.S., she applied that experience to a problem she said she saw happening a lot around her: Food-borne illnesses.

Recommended Videos

“I felt like people were constantly getting sick, and I found out that 89 percent of contaminants pass through kitchens,” she told Digital Trends.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

In 2017, Schindler invented the PathSpot hand scanner, a small, low-cost device that can detect the amount of contaminant on a person’s hands with a simple scan. More specifically, it will detect common bacteria like E. coli and salmonella that often lead to foodborne illnesses.

“I haven’t met many other people who are as obsessed with hand washing as I am,” she told Digital Trends with a laugh.

PathSpot hand washing scanner
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Her machine doesn’t test for COVID-19 — at least not yet, Schindler said. The machine isn’t designed to detect contaminants that are mostly airborne like coronavirus. However, it is able to test for the presence of fecal matter, and according to Schindler, there is research being done into whether this is a source of coronavirus.

In the meantime, we could all get better at hand washing. Schindler says that 98 percent of the time when people fail tests, it’s because they’ve missed some specific spots on their hands: _n and around jewelry, wrists, and underneath the fingernails. And, Schindler said, if you’re missing those spots, you’re likely missing others. Also, make sure you dry your hands with a paper towel — do not just let your hands air dry.

“The virus will just dry right back onto your hands if you do that,” Schindler told DT.

Hand sanitizer is a tricky proposition, she said. The problem is you have to rub it a full 20 seconds and let it completely dry and then wait one whole minute before touching anything. That’s a long time. “You can’t just immediately touch something else,” she said.

The good news is, it’s easy to get better at hand washing.

“We do see that 20 percent of people fail the test in the first month of using the product,” Schindler said. “But after one month, that number drops by 75 percent, and after six months, it drops by 95 percent. The thing is, most people just don’t know what’s there. You can’t see or smell it.” Most of the time, she said, when her team asks a test subject how they felt about failing, they’ll say, “I just had no idea,” and start checking themselves more frequently.

Schindler said the company is currently developing a similar machine that can check for contamination on surfaces such as countertops or fridges, as well as looking to expand to farms, research and testing facilities, and even hospitals.

“It’s good that we’re able to bring awareness to hand washing in a way that hasn’t been done before,” she said. “The more people who have this knowledge, the better.”

Maya Shwayder
I'm a multimedia journalist currently based in New England. I previously worked for DW News/Deutsche Welle as an anchor and…
Performance leaks for AMD’s RX 9070 XT are all over the place
RX 7900 XTX and RX 7900 XT on a pink background.

We're in that exciting period leading up to the release of some of next year's best graphics cards, and that means leaks and predictions are coming out every single day. The last few weeks have really brought into focus AMD's next-gen flagship, which is now said to be called the RX 9070 XT. But now, more than ever, we're seeing a lot of conflicting information about the kind of performance we can expect from the top RDNA 4 card. The latest leaks see it falling within a stone's throw of Nvidia's RTX 4080.

According to zhangzhonghao on the Chiphell forums (who is a frequent leaker in the CPU and GPU space), the difference between the RX 9070 XT and the RTX 4080 is just 5%. They didn't specify which card was the winner, though, and we don't know which games they were tested in.

Read more
Apple’s futuristic iPhone display may not be released for a while longer
Someone holding an iPhone 16, showing a home screen.

If you wish to use an iPhone with virtually no bezels around the screen, you will need to wait a little longer than initially thought. A new industry report says the release of Apple's long-rumored OLED display with "zero bezels" for the iPhone has slid further into an uncertain timeline.

South Korean outlet The Elec, which was the first to report of the existence of a "zero-bezel" iPhone display, has now reported the launch date is unforeseeable because the technology "is not yet developed enough."

Read more
Nvidia’s RTX 5080 might be outrageously expensive
RTX 4080 graphics card installed in a test bench.

We're mere days away from Nvidia officially announcing the RTX 50-series. Many leakers have already shared information about the specs of Nvidia's upcoming best graphics cards, but the pricing has remained a mystery -- until now. Vex, a YouTuber, just shared a claim about the pricing of Nvidia's RTX 5080, and it looks like we might have a repeat of the previous generation on our hands, and then some.

Before we dive in, here's the obligatory disclaimer: We have no way of verifying the credibility of this leak. Vex was reportedly contacted by someone who works for an Australian retailer, and that person provided a screenshot listing many Asus RTX 5080 graphics cards, along with some basic specs and pricing. It could be true, and it could be fake -- we just don't know right now. One thing is certain, though: If this is real, it's not good news for gamers.

Read more