Thursday, May 15, 2008

Germs, not genes, cause most diseases.

Throughout history, germs have always been drastically underestimated in their ability to cause destruction and death. Germs have repeatedly been overlooked and rejected by the medical establishment as causes for disease. Perhaps this is because germs are invisible to the human eye and it is hard for us to believe that something we cannot see can have the ability to cause great harm to our "formidable" bodies. Whatever the case may be, the fact remains that microscopic germs can be, in fact, very harmful to our health.

As scientists discover more about them and their connections to certain diseases and conditions, germs are turning out to be more dangerous and sinister than we ever thought. In the past few years, several new studies and laboratory conclusions have pointed to germs as the instigators of many devastating non-acute diseases - chronic diseases that doctors used to think were caused by poor lifestyle and bad genes. What we are discovering is that the symptoms of long term bombardment by germs are generally undetected until they turn into something devastating like heart disease or cancer later in life.

The damage that germs can do is comparable to cigarette smoking, obesity, and lack of exercise. A little won't kill you but year after year, decade after decade, the snowball causes an avalanche which buries you.

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Friday, May 2, 2008

Did You Know...







• More women than men report brushing before going out and more women are likely to brush their teeth at work or in a restaurant bathroom.

• Three out of four patients don’t change their toothbrush as often as they should.

• In 1857, H.N. Wadsworth was credited as the first American to patent the toothbrush.

• 94% of Americans say they brush nightly and 81% say they do it first thing in the morning.

• 38.5 = the total days an average American spends brushing teeth over a lifetime.(AAP)

• Women smile about 62 times a day compared to men who smile on average 8 times a day.

• Right handed people tend to chew food on the right side, while left handed people tend to chew on the left.

• More than 51 million hours of school are lost each year by children due to dental related illness.

• Adults lose more than 164 million hours of work each year due to oral health problems or dental visits.

• Like fingerprints, everyones tongue print is different.

• Tooth decay remains the most common chronic disease among children ages 5-17 with 59% affected.

• 32% of Americans cite bad breath as the least attractive trait of their co-workers. (AAP)

• 78% of Americans have had at least 1 cavity by age 17. (CDC, 2002)

• 75 percent of the U.S. population has some form of periodontal gum disease.