CBS News/ September 19, 2011, 9:48 AM

Dangerous germs in fast food kids' play areas?

Erin Carr-Jordan is a mom on a mission.

Carr, a professor who specializes in child development and mother of four, from Chandler, Ariz., has been checking out the play areas in dozens of fast food restaurants in eleven states.

She said on "The Early Show" Monday that she found germs in those areas that could make your kids sick.

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Carr-Jordan said, "We found dirt and grime and rotting food and hair in clumps and swear words all over the place. Graffiti. Equipment in disrepair that is broken. Second-story windows that are busted out. Slides that have large gashes in them. You name it  -- if it's a thing you don't want your child being exposed to, we found it inside these play lands."

When the restaurants weren't making changes, Carr-Jordan said, she enlisted the help of a friend to test specimens collected from the play lands in a lab.

She said, "We found several strands of opportunistic pathogens, in other words, things that can cause infection or disease. We found stuff that causes meningitis, food-borne illness, skin, hair, eye infections  ... fecal contamination, coliforms, quite a few things can make children ill, and several of which are multi-drug resistant and potentially fatal."

In a statement to CBS News, McDonald's says, "We put our customers first, and are taking these concerns very seriously. We've spoken with Dr. Carr-Jordan and assigned a team to review the report findings and our own existing procedures. While we have stringent sanitizing procedures for weekly, daily and even spot cleaning, we're always looking for ways to improve our standards and how they are followed at each restaurant."

When asked about the statement, Carr-Jordan said, "I don't think it's an actual response. I think it's a statement, which really isn't the same thing, because they have taken no corrective changes. They haven't implemented any new policy. I'm aware of that statement. I have spoken with them and I keep saying to them, 'How is that reviewing process going and when do you plan on making actual policy actually changes?' And without their policy being translucent, we're not even sure what the policy actually is. I know it doesn't have any specific items related to disinfecting, and just to say you spot clean isn't enough, because it doesn't identify what that actually means. The results that I'm getting consistently, across the board, from McDonald's and from the other establishments that I've been to, indicate that they are not being cleaned. The levels are so high that that's not true. There is either no incentive for them to clean them or they are just not being cleaned."

Carr-Jordan said parents need to be aware of the problem.

"We have a presumption of safety, rather than risk," she said. "I think as soon as we have senators and representatives who start to sponsor (legislation), I think they will take it very, very seriously and,as soon as it hits their (fast food chains') pocketbook, they will take it more seriously, as well."

For more information about Carr-Jordan's cause, go to KidsPlaySafe on Facebook.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
6 Comments Add a Comment
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ashenkar says:
I recommend using a Bacterminator phone cover from www.Bacterminator.com. I just got them for myself and my wife and they're awesome! They're antibacterial and non toxic for up to three years with heavy use. They also have them for your iPad which is great. I put my iPhone down every where and then my kids play with it, put it in their mouths. This way at least I know my phone is not picking up any nasty germs.
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dickkahrs says:
Get rid of the play areas. Concentrate on improving the food.
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pak31 says:
She had to do a study or test to find out that play areas are dirty? That is common sense isn't it? If you teach your children to be careful, not to put fingers or hands in their mouths and was hands after playing then you should be fine. There are disgusting germs in your own home,even though you clean, there is no way to get around it except wash your hands. We are taught hygene all our lives through school, signage in bathrooms etc. This woman can do what she wants but it's a bit extreme. If you have your child playing at restaurants a lot maybe you'd better consider eating in a bit more.
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onechimpanzee says:
C'mon, little kids play in play areas~ naturally, there'll be traces of a$$ and slobber.
/not really news
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OnTheRoad01 says:
Maybe this woman and all parents should like maybe 'Wash their children's dirty little hands!'. It is nice that no matter what they always have someone else to blame for everything!
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tsigili says:
Some people are so foolish, they don't recognize that the only way to have resistance to germs, is to be exposed to them.

You can get so obsessed with being germ free, that you actually do more harm, than good.
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