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Coronavirus: The Most Dangerous Public Place

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Wed, Sep 9, 2020 04:16 PM

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 ‌ Research shows that this type of public place is the worst for spreading viruses and oth

 ‌ Research shows that this type of public place is the worst for spreading viruses and other germs. [Health Watch] Sponsored Content “Crazy” compound eliminates prostate cancer Scott Michaels’ doctors thought he was crazy for opting out of surgery for his prostate cancer. But he insisted on using [this natural, 15-cent compound]( instead. Now, seven years later, Scott is completely cancer-free. Hear his whole story—and how you can use this simple “five and dime fix” yourself—at the 5:06 mark of [this groundbreaking video](. [Click here]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Coronavirus: The Most Dangerous Public Place These days, risk assessment is a calculation all of us make every time we go out the front door. Wherever we are headed, we think about the chances that we may be exposed to the coronavirus. But not even experts can tell us with any certainty which public places are safe and which are not. A new study reveals one place you should absolutely avoid if you possibly can. The research was published in the journal Physics of Fluids. Scientists looked at whether the coronavirus could be easily spread in public restrooms. They used computers to simulate “particle movement that occurs with the act of flushing. The researchers found that when a urinal or toilet flushes, it ejects a cloud of tiny particles which potentially carry coronavirus. Although both urinals and toilets send germ-laden vapor into the air, urinals actually emit it faster and farther, the study found. This means the men’s room may be more infectious than the ladies’ room. “From our work, it can be inferred that urinal flushing indeed promotes the spread of bacteria and viruses,” said Dr. Xiangdong Liu. He is one of the study authors. Mask wearing should be mandatory in public restrooms during the pandemic, Dr. Liu said. Better design of urinals and toilets so they don’t release virus particles are “urgently needed to prevent the spread of COVID-19,” he said. Can’t Hold It? Do This. Sometimes you gotta go. Here are four ways to make using a public restroom safer. - Mask up before you go in. This is stating the obvious. You should be wearing a mask in all public places. - Get in, get out. Don’t spend any more time than you need to inside a restroom. - Men should not use a urinal. Use a toilet stall instead. - Don’t use an air hand dryer. This is important. --------------------------------------------------------------- Recommended Content Kills more cancer cells than a dose of radiation [seed]( Just a few drops of this plant extract [killed more cancer cells]( than a dose of radiation in a groundbreaking in vitro study. You won’t believe [what else researchers found...]( [Click here]( --------------------------------------------------------------- The Best Way to Dry Your Hands to Stop Coronavirus Scientists at the University of Westminster examined three hand-drying options: - Paper towels. - Warm air dryers. These are the old fashioned blowers with a nozzle that shoots air downward onto your hands. - Jet dryers. These are the newer devices with a slot into which you place your hands. They shoot out air at 300 mph. The researchers asked subjects to dip their gloved hands into a solution of a harmless virus. Then, after giving their hands a quick shake, they tried one of the three drying methods. Finally, samples were collected from the air and surfaces at different distances from where the drying took place. The verdict? The jet blower is a germ-spewing machine. It spread 1,300 times more microbes around the bathroom than paper towels. Some of the virus particles landed 10 feet away. Jet dryers were 60 times germier than regular warm air hand dryers. Researchers concluded that jet dryers not only put the person who is drying their hands at risk… They endanger others in the bathroom at the same time. The scientists said warm air blowers are somewhat better because they push germs toward the floor. Paper towels are the best option. Another study also found that air dryers are a bad option… It was published in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology. Scientists brought plates into restrooms. They exposed some of the plates to 30 seconds of air blown from hand dryers. They let the other plates just sit on restroom counters for two minutes. The plates that sat out had on average fewer than one germ colony on them. The air-blasted plates had 18 to 60 colonies. That’s what you could also expect on your hands after using them. The researchers believe hand dryers act as germ “reservoirs.” Dr. Peter Setlow led the plate study. He says he now uses paper towels to dry his hands. Avoid public restrooms whenever possible while the pandemic rages on. But if you have to go, take these precautions to be as safe as possible. Editor’s Note: Discover the single best supplement for stronger immunity… The fruit extract that helps 93% of people with respiratory viruses get better in just two days… The germ hotspot that most of us forget to sanitize. Find all this and more in Independent Healing’s Coronavirus Pandemic Guide. Go [HERE](. In Good Health, Garry Messick Managing Editor The Institute for Natural Healing [References Available Here.]( Related Articles: [Study Shows Docs Give 71% of Coronavirus Patients Useless Antibiotics]( [Coronavirus: The Heart Effects Are Scary]( [Why More Coronavirus ICU Patients Are Making It Out Alive]( --------------------------------------------------------------- © 2020 The Institute for Natural Healing. All Rights Reserved. For more from The Institute for Natural Healing, [visit our website](. To end your free subscription, click here: [Unsubscribe]( Health Watch may be republished with its links intact by non-commercial entities. Health Watch may not be republished for commercial purposes without written permission. This information is offered as a general guideline, not one-size-fits-all medical advice. Talk to your doctor before making any changes in your personal health care regimen. To manage your subscription by mail or for any other subscription issues, write us at: Order Processing Center Attn: Customer Service P.O. Box 925 Frederick, MD 21705 USA

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