Why A Toilet Is a Better Desk Than Your Desk
from the just-to-be-safe-don't-eat-off-your-phone dept
There have been numerous studies about the surprising places that germs are found. Once again experts are warning that objects like doorknobs pale in comparison to mobile phones and keyboards when it comes to germ load, while a typical desk, they claim, is more germ infested than a toilet seat. The conclusion is that people who consider themselves careful about germs, by flipping up a public toilet seat with their foot for example, have their fears misplaced. But what all of these studies leave out is whether people who fail to abide by proper germ prevention techniques actually get sick more often. Do teenagers who chat on cell phones and then pass it off to a friend actually have a higher rate of the flu? Do people who go to cybercafes actually come down with colds more frequently? Perhaps, there's more to it than the simple equation of more germs equals more sickness. Still, just in case, you might want to pick up a sterilizing phone charger.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Keyboard vs. Toilet Seat
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Re: Keyboard vs. Toilet Seat
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Re: Keyboard vs. Toilet Seat
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Bolster the immune system
IMHO.
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Re: Bolster the immune system
That is why I refuse to get the flu shot.
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Re: Re: Bolster the immune system
The flu shot injects a small amount of the virus into your bloodstream so that you build up an immunity. In no way does it make you any weaker.
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Re: Re: Bolster the immune system
That is why I refuse to get the flu shot."
Dear Mikester -- congratulations. You are so much smarter than the rest of us. You seem to think the flu shot helps people live in a "bubble and sterile environment." You couldn't be more wrong. The flu shot IS the germ. You are taking a small dose of (inactivated) germs to help build your immunity when that big dose arrives. But please, get your resistance the hard way and save the flu shot for the rest of us. Thanks!
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Re: Re: Re: Bolster the immune system
Listen brainiacs, the flu shot is a farce anyway. It is only a sample of the top flus going around the previous year. You better hope those same strains are still going around when you get the shot, other wise it's all for nothing.
By letting your own immune system fight it off naturally, you're doing your body a service by building it up the proper way.
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Re: Re: Re: Bolster the immune system
That's exactly what I do, but not because I don't "believe" in the flu shot, but because there is typically a shortage of shots and my 36-year-old body is much better able to fight off minor infections than would be a 76-year-old's who might NEED my dose. Then again, in a world where everyone has the shot, my added protection from the shot is pretty small. Hmm...is this an example of *negative* network externalities? Cool.
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Re: Re: Bolster the immune system
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Re: Bolster the immune system
Kind of sort of. The primary problem with your statement is that viruses mutate very quickly and bacteria mutate rapidly as well.
Working as a paramedic for 8 years I can tell you that it's more of a function of the individual. Some people have very fast acting immune systems and hardly ever get sick, some are cursed. I had a partner who was sick all the time and ended up quitting because she just couldn't be around people with communicable diseases. Me, I caught one case of the flu in my 8 years as a medic and that's only because my patient insisted on shaking my hands after I had taken my gloves off.
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Not true at all. So very very wrong. You don't have to get sick to build up immunity. The idea is to get EXPOSURE to mild amounts of many antigens when you are young. This is most dramatically illustrated in the case of parents who are too strict and sterile with their kids -- they inevitable develop asthma and allergies. Some of it is hereditary, but a great deal of it has to do with being allowed to play in the dirt a little. Pets too -- kids who are raised with atleast 1 pet have a 25-50% lower chance of getting asthma than those raised without pets.
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The proper term here would be "inevitably", though it would still be wrong. What you are referring to is the hygiene hypothesis, which claims that kids growing up in antiseptic environment are at INCREASED RISK of developing asthma and allergies. However, there are just as many studies which show that kids exposed to certain kinds of bacteria or viruses are at increased risk of asthma/allergy themselves. Variants of the theory talk about the lack of diversity in gut flora. There is no consensus among scientists on how the hygiene hypothesis works, if it works at all.
Some of it is hereditary, but a great deal of it has to do with being allowed to play in the dirt a little.
However, there are many studies which show that certain kinds of mycobacteria (microbes that live in the soil) INCREASE the risk of allergies/asthma.
Pets too -- kids who are raised with atleast 1 pet have a 25-50% lower chance of getting asthma than those raised without pets.
Here also, the results are contradictory. About half the scientific papers out there say that pets INCREASE allergies, while another half say it doesn't. Most allergists recommend that allergy patients get rid of their pets.
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Shades of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Seriously, one of the most effective, simple-minded, and inexpensive ways to avoid most communicable disease is to wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water several times a day.
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Re: Shades of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
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Re: Shades of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
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Toilet Experts
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Keyboard vs. Toilet Seat
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Keyboard vs. Toilet Seat
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admit it
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Kick it up
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Keyboard vs. Toilet Seat
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Re:
Washing your hands and keeping them off your face helps immensely.
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At least I feel better...
Lastly on the subject of flu shots: I got one for the first time ever at the start of last winter, and I got the worst flu I've had in years, which turned into pneumonia. I'll never get it again.
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Like whenever I would visit my friends house her rabbit would always make me sneeze and my eyes water and everything else, now that it lives here it stopped bothering me after a couple weeks.
I've never gotten a flu shot and the only time I can ever remember having the flu was about 7 years ago (I was 11 then, and I was super sick but haven't had it since).
And it doesn't really matter HOW MANY germs are on something, it matters how harmful they are to a person. For instance your significant others mouth probably contains a shitload of bacteria, but do you make them sanitize their mouth everytime before you kiss them?
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This is a falacy
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Re: This is a falacy
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Re: This is a falacy
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Immune, or not.
After the initial round of exposure, you seldom get sick from flu, colds, or any of the other 'nuisance' diseases that plague mankind.
Every shift is a new set of free innoculations against whatever
is making it's rounds in society.
Still have to watch out for (and get medically innoculated against)
the traditional 'killer' diseases: typhoid, hepatitis, tetanus, etc.
And be real careful about needle sticks or other breaches of your skin.
One question:
Does this continual 'priming' of the immune system have a longterm cost?
Do decades of daily exposure eventually lead to immune system failure?
Food for thought -- just don't eat it near your keyboard.
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Flu Shots
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and unless u shit in ur pants it cleaner than ur hands
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how
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we intend to take full advantage of them!
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