Valerie Kalfrin

Ah, the sounds of winter: carols, tinkling bells, sneezes and hacking coughs. As we prepare for a seemingly inevitable battle against colds and the flu, it’s natural to wonder if there will ever be a way to prevent illness in the first place. Although you might not make it to spring without a sniffle, there are ways to avoid getting sick -- and to feel better if you do fall ill. Here’s how:

Sneeze Like a Vampire

When you cough or sneeze, you spread oodles of germs by covering your mouth or nose with your palm and then touching other surfaces, says Warren McDougle, epidemiology program manager for the Hillsborough County Department of Health in Tampa, Fla. Instead of using your hands, cough or sneeze into the inside of your elbow (as if you were Dracula hiding behind his cape). If you do sneeze into your hands, prevent a cold by washing them immediately.

Wipe out Germs

In your home and office, use disinfecting wipes to clean objects you and others use often. That includes doorknobs, telephones, remote controls and computer keypads. It’s especially important to keep these surfaces clean when someone who uses that area is sick, says McDougle.

Scrub up

Another way to help prevent a cold is to wash hands before you eat, as well as after using the restroom or touching surfaces. Use warm water and soap and rub briskly for about 20 to 30 seconds (or as long as it takes to sing “Happy Birthday”). “It’s the friction along with the soap and water that remove germs,” says McDougle.

Use Sanitizer Sparingly

Although hand sanitizer is convenient, it’s not a foolproof substitute for hand-washing, says McDougle. After repeated use, it creates a residue on your hands, making it ineffective. Try not to use it more than six times in a row.

Drink up

If you do get sidelined by a cold, drink plenty of fluids to replenish your system and make breathing through your nose easier, advises James Orlowski, M.D., chief of pediatrics at University Community Hospital in Tampa, Fla. This includes chicken soup, which has been shown by some studies to help people feel better quicker. “No one knows why, and no one knows whether it needs to be homemade or canned,” he said.

Be Wary of Supplements

Zinc, echinacea and vitamin C all have followers who swear by their healing properties -- but science may prove them wrong. Two studies conducted by the same researcher who found zinc shortened the course of the common cold later found it had no benefit. Zinc nasal sprays have also been associated with a permanent loss of smell, says Orlowski. The jury is out on vitamin C; some research shows it helps, while other studies have found it doesn’t. As for echinacea, researchers have found it has no effect on colds at all.

Get Some Z’s

If you’re sick, bed rest is the best remedy, says Orlowski. Sleep allows the body to devote its energies to healing and fighting infection. Don’t try to tough it out at the office: “If you’re sick, stay home,” he says. “Don’t go to work or school and expose others.”

 

Available at Amazon.com:

Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature-Deficit Disorder

No More Digestive Problems

Giant Book of Kitchen Counter Cures: 117 Foods That Fight Cancer, Diabetes, Heart Disease, Arthritis, Osteoporosis, Memory Loss, Bad Digestion and Hundreds ... Problems! (Jerry Baker Good Health series)

The Flexitarian Diet: The Mostly Vegetarian Way to Lose Weight, Be Healthier, Prevent Disease, and Add Years to Your Life

The Superfoods Rx Diet: Lose Weight with the Power of SuperNutrients

Cure Constipation Now: A Doctor's Fiber Therapy to Cleanse and Heal

Confessions of a Former Cosmetic Dentist

 

 

NEWS & CURRENT EVENTS ...

WORLD | AFRICA | ASIA | EUROPE | LATIN AMERICA | MIDDLE EAST | UNITED STATES | ECONOMICS | EDUCATION | ENVIRONMENT | FOREIGN POLICY | POLITICS

 

Health - Best Cold-buster Strategies