Gel wipe

Gel wipe is a moisturizing gel applied to dry toilet paper for cleaning purposes, like personal hygiene, or to reduce skin irritation from diarrhea. It was developed in the 21st century as an environmentally sensitive alternative to wet wipes.[1][2]

History

Estonian Siim Saat is seen as the inventor of gel wipe in 2011. In 2016 he was among seven entrepreneurs in the world nominated for an award by the Healthcare Startup Society in London at the Healthcare Startup Conference.[3][4] Gel wipe is seen as the solution to wet wipe pollution.[5][6]

Uses

Although marketed primarily for wiping bottoms, it is not uncommon to use it against skin rash, in the case of diarrhea or even as a substitute for water and soap on hiking trips.[7][8][9]

Gel wipes began to be marketed as complementary hygiene product for toilet paper by SATU laboratory,[10] as a luxury option by St Joseph's Toiletries[11] or hipster product by Zum Bum,[12] and Zero Taboos that makes Wipegel.[13] Many adults now use gel wipe with toilet paper as an alternative to wet wipes that cause environmental and sewer problems.[14][15] All wet wipes sold as "flushable" in the UK have so far failed the water industry's disintegration tests, the BBC has found.[16] A study by Ryerson University tested 23 wipes with the "flushable" label and found only two that partially disintegrated.[17]

gollark: Probably. It was talked about *before* that thing too.
gollark: The justification was some bullying last year which happened to involve phones... clearly this is the appropriate response.
gollark: My school, in its infinite wisdom, has banned phones during lunch/break.
gollark: I mean, they're exempt from minimum wage...
gollark: Soon: monkeys hired by major stock trading whatevers.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.