Anyway, those health warnings. One came from some university or research department from somewhere across the pond and warned of dangerous fungus found growing on the rubber seals of dishwashers. There are three things that occur to me in this connection.
- Those dishwashers were probably being run on the eco-friendly programme that runs for 30 minutes at 30 degrees. Push up to the old-fashioned full programme at 60 and the fungus will probably disappear. It's the relatively low temperature that is breeding it.
- You eat a peck of dirt before you die. Just what a peck of dirt looks like or what its dimensions might be, I have no idea. But I bet the amounts of fungus found in those dishwashers were miniscule and would need at least 329 years to build up enough power to kill more than an ant.
- I'm not going to stop using the dishwasher - in any case, the tea towel is probably dirtier!
Which brings me nicely to the third health scare. This one also concerns principally the more elderly segment of the population. It seems that certain combinations of common drugs - some available only on prescription from the doctor, some available easily enough at the chemist and some freely obtainable over the counter at any corner shop - can increase the chance of dying within the next two years by up to quite a lot. Oh bugger it. I can't be bothered to type any more. This is how the Daily Telegraph reported it:
What was it I said the other day? "Those whom the gods wish to destroy they first make mad."Well-known brands of hay fever tablets, painkillers and sleeping pills pose a previously unknown threat to people’s health when taken together, British scientists claim.
Many are available over the counter at pharmacies as well as being prescribed by GPs, nurses and chemists.
Today the scientists behind the study call for doctors to recognise how dangerous these drug combinations can be and to prescribe harmless alternatives instead.
Researchers from the University of East Anglia and the University of Kent identified 80 widely used medications that, when used in combination, were found to increase the risk of serious health problems.
The drugs, including common allergy treatments Piriton and Zantac, as well as Seroxat, an anti-depressant, are thought to be used by half of the 10 million over-65s in Britain. Many of the drugs, when taken in combination, were found to more than treble an elderly patient’s chance of dying within two years.
Now, will you open another bottle, Paddy? And remind me, what was it you said those little purple thingies would do for me?
And now whenever you go to Boots for over-the-counter medication you get the third degree about what other medications you are taking! And try to buy two boxes of something like Ibuprofen and you can't -- but then you can go in a few minutes later and buy the second box because someone else is serving you. First graders! That's what we are ...
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