Mar
17
2008
Part III – a) Keeping My Home Germ Free & Effective Hand Washing
Avian flu, rhinovirus, SARS, norovirus, MRSA, e-coli, salmonella, malaria and cholera are names of diseases and conditions that are increasingly prevalent in our modern world. Health professionals all around the globe are constantly assessing the pandemic risk, issuing warnings and recommending steps to prevent those pathogens from spreading. Foodborne, airborne and Viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF) (1) illnesses are particularly contagious through direct contact with a contaminated surface and in presence of a sick individual. Cross-contamination usually passes from hands to eye, to mouth and to nose. The solution health professionals, from the CDC to your physician are promoting is simple: wash your hands and avoid contact with a contagious individual. Experts will often add to the usual list of recommendations the use of antimicrobial products. Despite these precautions, contagious diseases outbreaks are on the rise, and the environmental and social change will most likely cause a migration of “new” germs (2) and lead to an increase of outbreaks. The next three posts look at some solutions to prevent the spread of contagious illnesses.
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Jan
28
2008
This is the time of the year the kids bring back home contagious illnesses they caught who knows where and from. Soon the siblings get sick as well, and we have to take time off from work. Schools and classmates are the usual suspects, but chances are hand hygiene negligence played the most part. To reduce the incidence of pathogens we are stocking antimicrobial products in our home cabinets, a behavior that is not without incidence on health, safety and the environment. In a three part series, I intent to address the issues surrounding this controversial topic, starting with revisiting the roots of poor hand hygiene, then sorting out some “staggering” evidence and finally offering some sound solutions that everyone – including schools and your work place – can easily adopt while keeping toxic products at bay and lowering our carbon footprint.
Part 2 – Our immune system is up against a steep hill. Continue Reading »
Jan
11
2008
This is the time of the year the kids bring back home contagious illnesses they caught who knows where and from. Soon the siblings get sick as well, and we have to take time off from work. Schools and classmates are the usual suspects, but chances are hand hygiene negligence played the most part. To reduce the incidence of pathogens we are stocking antimicrobial products in our home cabinets, a behavior that is not without incidence on health, safety and the environment. In a three part series, I intent to address the issues surrounding this controversial topic, starting with revisiting the roots of poor hand hygiene, then sorting out some “staggering” evidence and finally offering some sound solutions that everyone – including schools and your work place – can easily adopt while keeping toxic products at bay and lowering our carbon footprint.
Part 1 – Is catching a contagious illness an ineluctable outcome of social life?
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