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Author Topic: Finger-Licking Gross  (Read 3550 times)
dark_globe
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« Reply #15 on: August 22, 2006, 02:00:44 PM »

The Purell is the best idea; you're not going to change a person's behavior.

On a related note, every semester I would get the flu when it went around; no exceptions. Last semester I decided to be intelligent for a change and wash my hands with hot water and soap regularly while on campus, as has been repeatedly advised by health professionals. I didn't get the flu for the first time in years.
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fifthyear
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« Reply #16 on: August 24, 2006, 07:46:51 AM »

A former colleague of mine wears gloves to grade papers when he would notice that the class was passing around colds.  He said that it is more to keep him from touching his face and rubbing his nose while he graded, and that he had not gotten the flu once since starting the habit.
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al_wallace
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« Reply #17 on: August 25, 2006, 08:01:29 AM »

Starfleet_Grad, please report to Sick Bay for a shot of Saurian Brandy, Dr. McCoy's all-purpose cure for hysterical overreactions (and over-acting).

Let it go, and stop watching episodes of "Monk."  Germs are everywhere, especially viruses, which can live on surfaces for quite a while (bacteria not so much because they require moisture).  Your best defense is to wash your hands often, especially during cold and flu season.


Just to combine the star-trek references with bacteria, many bacteria CAN survive in the absence of moisture--as long as they are spore-formers. In fact, not only can they survive without moisture, but they can survive the complete vacuum of outer space and being doused with radiation. It depends on the bacteria that you examine. In fact, some bacteria are so resistant to environmental extremes, that they served as the basis of the "panspermia" hypothesis for the origin of life on earth...that we are extra-terrestrials derived from bacteria that traveled via astroid or comet (not the Enterprise) to our planet and innoculated the planet with life--which then diversified.
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realfrancie
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« Reply #18 on: August 25, 2006, 10:17:24 AM »

Just to combine the star-trek references with bacteria, many bacteria CAN survive in the absence of moisture--as long as they are spore-formers. In fact, not only can they survive without moisture, but they can survive the complete vacuum of outer space and being doused with radiation. It depends on the bacteria that you examine. In fact, some bacteria are so resistant to environmental extremes, that they served as the basis of the "panspermia" hypothesis for the origin of life on earth...that we are extra-terrestrials derived from bacteria that traveled via astroid or comet (not the Enterprise) to our planet and innoculated the planet with life--which then diversified.

I didn't want to mention spore-forming bacteria (such as anthrax) because I really was trying to allay Starfleet-Grad's fears, and not raise them unduly, about the dangers of thumb-lickers.  Do you realize that if the OP reads this, he/she will be wearing a Haz-Mat suit to work from now on?

BTW, on the ET bacteria theory...Does this mean that the Earth is really just one big zit on the face of the cosmos?

On a serious note, listen to Dark Globe above (and your mom).  Washing your hands frequently with soap and water is the best and cheapest way to fight illness.  Anti-bacterial soaps don't help against viruses (although it's probably good to use them on wounds), and the hand sanitizers contain alcohol which is very drying, especially in the winter.
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sunny_side_up
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« Reply #19 on: August 25, 2006, 10:48:28 AM »

Reminds me of the cartoon with the planets sitting together and chatting: Earth says she doesn't feel so good, Mars wants to know what's wrong with her and she says "I have Home Sapiens", and you can see humankind like an ugly infection crawling all over her.
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