Travis Stork, M.D., emergency medicine physician and host of TV's "The Doctors", recently tweeted that before he became a doctor he used to get colds all the time.
The reason?
I used to get colds all the time before I became a doc. Why? Nobody ever taught me how to wash germs from my hands. http://t.co/cjKkyR5PVC[1]
— Travis Stork, M.D. (@TravisStorkMD) June 22, 2013[2]
And the bad news is that proper handwashing still eludes many of us, he says.
"Before I became a doctor I just ran some water over them," he said during a recent HuffPost Live appearance. "I could never figure out why I was sick all winter long."
Luckily, a sufficient scrub can go a long way in cold and flu prevention, he said. Just make sure you're washing well: Continue rubbing a soapy lather for at least 20 seconds, about as long as it should take you to hum "Happy Birthday" twice through[3] , according to the CDC.
Check out the clip above for more from Stork on staying sniffle-free this season.
References
- ^ http://t.co/cjKkyR5PVC (t.co)
- ^ June 22, 2013 (twitter.com)
- ^ hum "Happy Birthday" twice through (www.cdc.gov)
- ^ Send us a tip (www.huffingtonpost.com)
- ^ Send us a photo or video (www.huffingtonpost.com)
- ^ Suggest a correction (www.huffingtonpost.com)
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