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Black Oxygen OrganicsWhat's a "BOO"?
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Black Oxygen OrganicsWhat's a "BOO"?
Black Oxygen Organics
Is that anything like the craze about eating activated charcoal to "cleanse your system" back a few decades?
That would have actually been based upon a misinterpretation of actual science.
BOO is based upon the idea that there's an acid produced by decaying humus that might have anti-inflammatory properties. Research has not proven that decaying humus has any anti-inflammatory benefit. How they got from "possible anti-inflammatory" to "dirt might help with COVID" escapes me.
The time to have eaten dirt to help their immune system was when they were toddlers.
Or maybe they did and it was toxic dirt with lead and mercury.
I told someone the other day to move away 6 feet if they weren't going to put a mask on
I doubt that mask wearing makes much of a difference. To me, last week's reintroduction of mandatory mask wearing in England was a matter of Boris saying that we must do something to appear to be addressing Omicron, mandatory face coverings is something, therefore we must do it.
I doubt that mask wearing makes much of a difference. To me, last week's reintroduction of mandatory mask wearing in England was a matter of Boris saying that we must do something to appear to be addressing Omicron, mandatory face coverings is something, therefore we must do it.
Not to go off topic, but hookworms can be our friends.I wouldn't recommend eating dirt at any age. If for no other reason than it's a great way to get hookworms or other helminth infections.
There are some therapeutic uses of clay, like koalin, which is the active ingredient in some anti-diarrhea medications. However, none of these are going to help with a respiratory viral infection.
Masks do work... if they are worn properly. It's not just the filtration effect for the person wearing the mask. The cloth masks are similar to the effect of covering your nose and mouth when you sneeze; it helps from sending a spray of droplets containing the virus into the air around the person who is infected. The droplets are either trapped in the fabric of the mask or they are redirected down to the floor instead of high in the air where people in a crowd are more likely to breathe them in.
Probably the best empirical evidence that we have that masks do work is the airline industry. Since masks have been made mandatory for airline flights, we're not seeing outbreaks of COVID-19 from people traveling on planes. The infections from travel seem to be related more to what people are doing after they arrive at their destination... in crowds, without a mask.
If face masks don't work, why does everyone in an operating room wear them (except the patient)?![]()
The whole point is to stop infections.![]()
I wouldn't recommend eating dirt at any age. If for no other reason than it's a great way to get hookworms or other helminth infections.
There are some therapeutic uses of clay, like koalin, which is the active ingredient in some anti-diarrhea medications. However, none of these are going to help with a respiratory viral infection.
I doubt that mask wearing makes much of a difference. To me, last week's reintroduction of mandatory mask wearing in England was a matter of Boris saying that we must do something to appear to be addressing Omicron, mandatory face coverings is something, therefore we must do it.
I regularly hear pediatricians saying to let toddlers east dirt because it primes the immune system and makes it more robust.
Scotland (population 5.5 million) had a Delta surge in September and they have been flat at 2,300-2,800 new cases for the past month.unloadonme said:If they are worn properly. The rules regarding the compulsory wearing of face coverings have been consistently stricter in Scotland than in England, and yet the rate of infection in Scotland has been consistently higher.
