Stay Safe With These Healthy Habits

These simple, everyday practices that can keep you protected from a host of illnesses

offline
These simple, everyday practices that can keep you protected from a host of illnesses

Ever scoffed at a germophobe? Or argued about taking a bath? Well, it’s time for some humble pie because, as it turns out, the frequent hand-washers and daily floor scrubbers had it right all along. Keeping your body clean and your surroundings free of pathogens—bacteria and viruses—are the best and simplest ways to prevent a host of illnesses, including viral infections.

Here are the habits you should start at once, and others you should stop, in order to protect you and your family’s health.

Personal hygiene

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), frequent handwashing with soap and running water, or a disinfectant containing at least 60 per cent alcohol, is the most important habit to develop. Complement this with another crucial one—avoid touching your face, especially the eyes, nose and mouth, to ensure that any microbes on your hands do not get transferred into the body.

Fingernails can also pick up and collect dead skin cells, dirt and illness-causing organisms that do not wash away during handwashing. The CDC recommends that you keep your nails short and trimmed, scrub the undersides of your nails while washing your hands (a nail brush could be handy), avoid biting or chewing your nails and avoid cutting cuticles, as they act as barriers that prevent infection.

Photo: Shutterstock

Food and cooking

The World Health Organization identifies at least 200 illnesses, from diarrhoea to cancer, that come from unsafe food practices, particularly at home. To prevent these,...

Read more!