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Don't wash with antibacterial soap

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(from another group-but I thought it was important to share)

 

ALL IN THE FAMILY A friend of mine has four children. Inevitably, when one child gets sick, they all do. With cold and flu season upon us, the question is, how do you keep the germ of the day from knocking out an entire family? According to Michael Carlston, MD, assistant clinical professor of family and community medicine at the University of California San Francisco, School of Medicine, the best advice is age-old advice: Wash your hands. Wash your hands before eating, before leaving the bathroom and anytime they are dirty, he says. But, here's the fascinating part of his advice... Don't wash with antibacterial soap! Dr. Carlston's objections to using antibacterials is not that these products don't work, but that they work too well. Dr. Carlston explains that antibacterials get rid of the "friendly" bacteria that humans need. What's left are the more virulent strains that can harm us, minus a lot of the "friendlies" that protect us from the dangerous ones. The use of antibacterial soap actually puts us at a disadvantage. In a study published earlier this year in Annals of Internal Medicine, researchers found that people who use antibacterial soap got just as many runny noses and upper respiratory illnesses as those who did not. EXERCISE IS GOOD -- EVEN FOR YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM Dr. Carlston cautions about becoming overly "germphobic" as the cold and flu season wears on, and wants you to realize that if you do get sick, it is not a totally bad thing. "There is a utility to getting sick," he says. When you get a little illness, such as a cold, it gives your immune system a chance to exercise its illness-fighting ability just as exercising your muscles does. Like muscle, if you don't use it, you lose it. An immune system that never gets the chance to respond to a challenge will not grow stronger. Of course, he is not recommending that people go out looking for illnesses. It is instinctual and correct to avoid being near very sick people. (And, if you must be near them, don't forget to wash your hands!) It's just that a little sickness can make us stronger overall. He notes that the average child will get about 10 colds in the first 18 months of life, but then he/she will get far fewer after that. This is because his immune system has learned how to respond. As adults, he says, our immune systems still need the exercise. Of course, this does not apply to those who are immunosuppressed by HIV or other illnesses -- they must be extremely careful about avoiding germs. For the rest of us, taking care of ourselves overall (eating good food, exercising regularly, drinking plenty of water and washing our hands) plus catching a little cold once in a while may be the best prescription for ongoing health.

 

 

 

Diana Gonzalez

 

 

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Nothing wastes more energy than worrying - the longer a problem is carried, the heavier it gets. Don't take things too seriously - live a life of serenity, not a life of regrets.

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