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A fomite is any inanimate object or substance capable of carrying infectious organisms (such as germs or parasites) and hence transferring them from one individual to another. A fomite can be anything such as a cloth or mop heads so when cleaning this is important to remember that this could aid when spreading pathogenic organisms.
There are many examples of fomites with respect to medicine. Contaminated shoes may spread hoof and mouth disease. Other examples include tools such as laryngoscopes that are not properly disinfected between uses, dirty towels, eating utensils, and surfaces such as floors, walls, and tables may all serve to spread disease.
Researchers discovered that smooth (non-porous) surfaces transmit bacteria and viruses better than porous materials; so one is more likely to pick-up a disease from a door knob than from paper money.[citation needed] The reasoning is that porous, especially fibrous, materials absorb and trap the contagion, making it harder to contract through simply touching.
The word fomite is a back-formation from the plural fomites, which was originally the Latin plural of the singular, fomes, literally meaning touchwood or tinder. In classical Latin, fomites was pronounced like a concatenation of English "foe" + "me" + "tays"; but "foe" + "mites" has now become a common pronunciation, and "fomite" (also pronounced with a long \'i\') is the singular form in English.
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