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    Home Flu-Proofing Myths, Busted

    By Adam Verwymeren, Hometalk

    Flu season is in full swing, which means many people will be desperately trying to flu-proof their homes to keep contagions at bay. While people will go to great lengths to keep from getting sick, many of the things we do to purge the home of germs are pure myth, and won't actually help. Here are some of the top flu-proofing myths debunked.

    Myth 1: A cold, drafty home will cause you to catch cold or flu.

    The truth is, there really isn't any correlation between cold and germs, and your body's immune system can handle winter's icy chill, the New York Times reported. Cold and flu season do peak during the winter months, but the correlation probably has more to do with the fact that people spend a lot more time indoors in the winter, making it easier for germs to jump from one person to another. While you can save a bunch of money on your energy bill by sealing up drafts and installing better insulation, unfortunately you won't be insulating yourself from the flu.

    Myth 2: You can protect yourself with hand sanitizer.

    By offering germophobes the option of purging than hands of pathogens even when a sink isn't handy, alcohol-based hand sanitizers like Purell have taken off in popularity. While these sanitizers will kill germs on contact, there is little indication that they actually decrease the rate of illness, according to several recent studies. The problem is that hand sanitizers clean your hands, but the flu is an airborne virus. The flu spreads when a sick person's cough or sneeze causes little particles of pathogens to take to the air, and you can't scrub those away with a few squirts of Purell.

    Myth 3: You can sweat out a cold.

    Crank up the thermostat, slip into a hot bath and you'll just sweat out the cold, some people think. While a hot bath might be soothing when you're ill, it won't actually make you better, says ABC News.

    Myth 4: You can carpet bomb your house with antibacterial soap to rid it of disease.

    Antibacterial soaps, which contain a range of active ingredients like triclosan and sodium benzoate, have long promised to purge our home of illness. The problem, however, is that both cold and flu are caused by viruses, not bacteria. These soaps might work against bacterial infections like staph and E.coli, but have no real effect on viral infections. If you really want to do a number on both bacteria and viruses, just reach for ordinary bleach.

    Myth 5: You can blast away germs with an ultraviolet light.

    UV-C sanitizing wands have become a popular disinfectant in recent years. Rather than relying on harsh chemicals, these devices blast germs with a certain type of ultraviolet light that kills them on contact. While UV light systems certainly work on an industrial scale, and have been put to use killing germs in hospitals for more than a hundred years, the small handheld units have little effect, says the L.A. Times. Shining the light on every square inch and around every odd angle of a surface is really difficult, particularly since the commercially-available wands aren't that large. The devices also do little to stop airborne pathogens, which are the main cause of cold and flu.

    Myth 6: You can prevent getting a second cold by changing your toothbrush.

    There's no need to change your toothbrush after you get sick, says Slate.com. Like snowflakes, every strain of cold or flu is different. But once you're body defeats a particular strain, you're immune, so you can't give yourself the same cold you've already had.

    Read the original article on Networx.

     

    725 comments

    • Michael  •  5 months ago
      Any advice that might HELP?
      • Joe 5 months ago
        Take vitamin C powder(ascorbic acid) at the very first sign of a cold or flu coming on. Use 4-8grams every 20min for 3-4 hours and then a smaller maintenance dose of 2 grams every 4-6 hours for 7 days.
      • Christy 5 months ago
        the vitamin c thing is also a myth
      • Todd 5 months ago
        I like crabby's advice.
    • Nina  •  5 months ago
      You know, I have read many of the comments on here and a lot say stay home when your sick. I have to say, that there are some employers out there (and you know who you are) that are ready to fire someone who calls in to say they are sick with a cold or flu and can't come in to work. A lot of times the people who are sick call in to say they are sick and can't come in and their employer flies off the handle and tells them to come in or they are fired. I have worked at a place where this has happened (it was a nursing home).
      • DG 5 months ago
        True, but it can go both ways. I work for a food manufacturer and they sent a guy home one day because he had a cold. Gotta be careful with that stuff.
      • Sam 5 months ago
        Because so many people abuse the opportunity to have a sick day that it is pathetic.
      • Segues 5 months ago
        Sounds like the management folks at the Staples Headquarters, where your written up for every little thing you do. They are strick time management enthusiast's, and the turn around in folks in the last ten years has been unbelievable, must be that "The Chosen One's" modus opperandi without a doubt!!
    • Ed  •  5 months ago
      Chuckling away. I am a retired SF medic,part of our training is epindemeolgy. Just wash your face and hands. The Army issuse soap was dove. It kept your skin moist and cleans very well. The problem is kids do not play out side any more, heck I swam in cow ponds creeks and did evrything crazy before I was drafted. Please excuse my spelling it is one of my weakness's, but I still can fix you if your sick.
      • Sherry 5 months ago
        U made me smile, and I am sick as I write this! Common sense is oozing out of you! Love ya!
      • Paul 5 months ago
        Incompetence is "oozing out of you", Ed. How did an apparent "doctor" get through med school without knowing how to spell common words. Hard to look credible as a doc when you can't even "speel".
      • Scott Morrissey 5 months ago
        Dude Paul he said he was an Army Medic. Big defference between that and a doctor. Give the guy a break! I'm a spelling/grammar police type of guy too, but when someone asks for forgiveness for his poor spelling, you don't give him crap about it! Jeez who peed in your corn flakes today?
    • Mike Parrish  •  5 months ago
      I follow the advice of my internist. Keep the temperature comfortable - say 67 degrees at night in the winter. He explained that warm, dry heat from our HVAC causes our sinuses to dry up, therefore, keeping our bodies nature ability to trap airborne germs from entering our sinuses. And by the way, you'll see a reduction in morning headaches.
      • candacea 5 months ago
        I wish that helped me :( We keep ours that low and I still have sinus problems and morning headaches :(
      • why1 5 months ago
        Sounds like you may have a problem with your HVAC furnace , Your home maybe filling up with carbon monoxide , have your furnace checked .
      • Sierra Man 5 months ago
        Or turn down to a more reasonable and money saving 60 at night. 67 is still too much heat on a cold night...lots of hot air from the furnace.
    • JENNIFER M  •  5 months ago
      Colds are an inevitable part of life. Try to be smart and hygienic and eat right and exercise to keep your immune system in good shape. People obsess too much.
      • Sam 5 months ago
        Stress will get you even if you eat right, exercise, & take vitamins. Even if the stress is temporary over a specific incident.
      • Barbara 5 months ago
        True enough, Sam, but I think Jennifer is just saying that some common sense goes a long way, even with stress.
      • Fishibaiter 5 months ago
        @ Sam You need stress to a certain degree; controlling it is the problem. Don't let stress control you. There are many ways to combat stress, so you're stressed because you do nothing about it. Take a melatonin activation supplement, drink some chamomile tea before bed, bathe in epsom salt, do some deep focus meditation, take up yoga or tai chi.

        Stress management strategies:

        Start a stress journal
        A stress journal can help you identify the regular stressors in your life and the way you deal with them. Each time you feel stressed, keep track of it in your journal. As you keep a daily log, you will begin to see patterns and common themes. Write down:
        1.) What caused your stress (make a guess if you’re unsure).
        2.) How you felt, both physically and emotionally.
        3.) How you acted in response.
        4.) What you did to make yourself feel better.

        I)Exercise regularly. Physical activity plays a key role in reducing and preventing the effects of stress. Make time for at least 30 minutes of exercise, three times per week. Nothing beats aerobic exercise for releasing pent-up stress and tension.
        II)Eat a healthy diet. Well-nourished bodies are better prepared to cope with stress, so be mindful of what you eat. Start your day right with breakfast, and keep your energy up and your mind clear with balanced, nutritious meals throughout the day.
        III)Reduce caffeine and sugar. The temporary "highs" caffeine and sugar provide often end in with a crash in mood and energy. By reducing the amount of coffee, soft drinks, chocolate, and sugar snacks in your diet, you’ll feel more relaxed and you’ll sleep better.
        IV)Avoid alcohol, cigarettes, and drugs. Self-medicating with alcohol or drugs may provide an easy escape from stress, but the relief is only temporary. Don’t avoid or mask the issue at hand; deal with problems head on and with a clear mind.
        V)Get enough sleep. Adequate sleep fuels your mind, as well as your body. Feeling tired will increase your stress because it may cause you to think irrationally. Avoid people who stress you out – If someone consistently causes stress in your life and you can’t turn the relationship around, limit the amount of time you spend with that person or end the relationship entirely.
        VI)Take control of your environment – If the evening news makes you anxious, turn the TV off. If traffic’s got you tense, take a longer but less-traveled route. If going to the market is an unpleasant chore, do your grocery shopping online.
        VII)Avoid hot-button topics – If you get upset over religion or politics, cross them off your conversation list. If you repeatedly argue about the same subject with the same people, stop bringing it up or excuse yourself when it’s the topic of discussion.
        VIII)Do something you enjoy every day. Make time for leisure activities that bring you joy, whether it be stargazing, playing the piano, or working on your bike.
        IX)Express your feelings instead of bottling them up. If something or someone is bothering you, communicate your concerns in an open and respectful way. If you don’t voice your feelings, resentment will build and the situation will likely remain the same.
        X)Manage your time better. Poor time management can cause a lot of stress. When you’re stretched too thin and running behind, it’s hard to stay calm and focused. But if you plan ahead and make sure you don’t overextend yourself, you can alter the amount of stress you’re under.
        XI)Reframe problems. Try to view stressful situations from a more positive perspective. Rather than fuming about a traffic jam, look at it as an opportunity to pause and regroup, listen to your favorite radio station, or enjoy some alone time.
        XII)Look at the big picture. Take perspective of the stressful situation. Ask yourself how important it will be in the long run. Will it matter in a month? A year? Is it really worth getting upset over? If the answer is no, focus your time and energy elsewhere.
        *Set aside relaxation time.*
    • Alice  •  5 months ago
      The part about keeping warm and hot baths is misleading. It is TRUE that allowing your body to have an elevated temp of about 100-101 and bundling up to keep your temp elevated at the onset of a viral illness can kill the virus and shorten the length of illness. Viruses survive in a very small temperature range, and allowing your body to mount a healthy immune response and a low-grade fever is a way of eliminating the virus. In other words, taking antipyretics such as Tylenol and ibuprofen may make you feel less achy, but will also keep you sick longer because your body can't make a fever.
    • Beedoo!  •  5 months ago
      Being a little bit of a germophobe, I've taken to not using handrails and opening public doors with the side of my arm or wrist... less contact from where other people's hands have been. That being said, it's also not a bad thing to catch a cold once in a while to get your immune system prepped for similar strains. My feeling is that antibacterial things are just reducing the strength of our immune systems as a society, and at the same time antibiotics are getting weaker because they are being misused... kind of like setting one foot in the grave and digging, huh?
    • AeroScout  •  5 months ago
      Get adequate sleep, eat a balanced diet and wash your hands often. Stay away from a doctor's office if at all possible. There's a lot of sick people there. Also, stay away from your children during cold and flu season. They are germ factories and should be avoided like the plague. Better yet, go to Florida in September and don't return until June. Ah, if it were only possible... (Just Kidding)
    • Mary  •  5 months ago
      Anyone out there in "Cold" land have a remedy to STOP coughing - I cannot take Codeine....I just started a cold on Sunday and I will cough until Jan!
    • michsarabia  •  5 months ago
      I think it is telling that in Japan, they inoculate their kids, and only their kids, to prevent spread of flu, and it works. Schools are the number one place for families to share illnesses. And that is WITH every surface being sanitized on a nearly ongoing basis (by the way, it is desk tops, especially in high traffic areas such as libraries, that carry the most germs, not places like bathrooms... things that get sneezed on). Cold and flu IS airborne. We teach the kids to sneeze into their elbows, but kids tend to forget to apply elbow-sneezing and hand washing at the levels needed to prevent spread of illnesses, even with adults hovering. All it takes is a really good uncovered sneeze in an overcrowded classroom.... We want parents to keep the sick kids home, but the school is also penalized by NCLB and can lose "adequate yearly progress" if kids are absent.
    • Chris  •  5 months ago
      Stay home if you're sick. Do not go to school! Do not go to work! Do not go to the store! Be considerate of others.
    • Alicia  •  5 months ago
      I have to add that while you don't have to change your toothbrush after a cold or flu (i.e. having a virus), it *is* a good idea to change it after you have a *bacterial* infection like Strep throat, because you can catch it over and over again if the bacteria is present after your course of antibiotics.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 months ago
      Okay folks, the problem is, that you are an incubator for the cold or flu for a period of 3 to 5 days before the symptoms start. So staying home when sick may help, but the truth is you have already innoculated all of the people around you before you ever show your first sniffle or cough.
    • Joe  •  5 months ago
      The RDA for vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is wrong. 99% + of all animals on the planet make roughly 3-20 grams of "vitamin" C endogenously per day when healthy and adjusted to the weight of a human and much more when stressed or sick. So, why is 80mg enough for a human? It's only enough to prevent frank scurvy, much more is needed to prevent heart disease and numerous other chronic illnesses.
    • Ken  •  5 months ago
      Soooo how do you get rid of one? ;)
    • jennifer  •  5 months ago
      Any mention of the flu shot being ineffective? According to the CDC they don't work at all.
    • Letitia  •  5 months ago
      There are anti-viral herbs and remedies out there. Everything does not have to come from a pharmaceutical company!!!
    • michael h  •  5 months ago
      This is more of a question, than a comment. Germs and viruses breed in a warm moist envioronment. They die off in a cold dry envioronment. Why do we get sick in the winter time, when it's cold and dry? We should get sick in the summer time, when it's warm (hot) and humid?
    • lawren  •  5 months ago
      Alice: sure its true that warm baths can help... but if one has the flu and has a high temp the best thing to do is to sweet it out naturally... not force it out... wrapping up in blankets while having a high temp is the way to do it... but from what i know the BEST way to get rid of a cold is orange juice... thats right... some good old fashion o.j... drink a glass a day during the first signs and in 3 days you will be fine... and without the fever and conjested feeling... orange juice really REALLY helps
    • Beasty  •  5 months ago
      Aja, such a hard fail. I am certain everyone makes mistakes like you just did but reread the sentence and the sub heading of the article. If cold, as in temperature, was related to germs then we wouldn't store food in freezers and such.