12
Natural
Tips to
Prevent
a Cold
There
are no
known
cures
for
colds
and flu,
so cold
and flu
prevention
should
be your
goal. A
proactive
approach
to
warding
off
colds
and flu
is apt
to make
your
whole
life
healthier.
The most
effective
way for
preventing
the flu
is to
get the
flu
shot. It
may not
be
natural,
but it
works
better
than
anything
else.
But
there
are
other
strategies
you can
employ
as well.
WebMD
went to
Charles
B.
Inlander,
president
of The
People's
Medical
Society,
for
suggestions
you may
want to
try:
#1
Wash
Your
Hands
Most
cold and
flu
viruses
are
spread
by
direct
contact.
Someone
who has
the flu
sneezes
onto
their
hand,
and then
touches
the
telephone,
the
keyboard,
a
kitchen
glass.
The
germs
can live
for
hours --
in some
cases
weeks --
only to
be
picked
up by
the next
person
who
touches
the same
object.
So wash
your
hands
often.
If no
sink is
available,
rub your
hands
together
very
hard for
a minute
or so.
That
also
helps
break up
most of
the cold
germs.
Or rub
an
alcohol-based
hand
sanitizer
onto
your
hands.
#2 Don't
Cover
Your
Sneezes
and
Coughs
With
Your
Hands
Because
germs
and
viruses
cling to
your
bare
hands,
muffling
coughs
and
sneezes
with
your
hands
results
in
passing
along
your
germs to
others.
When you
feel a
sneeze
or cough
coming,
use a
tissue,
then
throw it
away
immediately.
If you
don't
have a
tissue,
turn
your
head
away
from
people
near you
and
cough
into the
air.
#3 Don't
Touch
Your
Face
Cold and
flu
viruses
enter
your
body
through
the
eyes,
nose, or
mouth.
Touching
their
faces is
the
major
way
children
catch
colds,
and a
key way
they
pass
colds on
to their
parents.
#4 Drink
Plenty
of
Fluids
Water
flushes
your
system,
washing
out the
poisons
as it
rehydrates
you. A
typical,
healthy
adult
needs
eight
8-ounce
glasses
of
fluids
each
day. How
can you
tell if
you're
getting
enough
liquid?
If the
color of
your
urine
runs
close to
clear,
you're
getting
enough.
If it's
deep
yellow,
you need
more
fluids.
#5 Take
a Sauna
Researchers
aren't
clear
about
the
exact
role
saunas
play in
prevention,
but one
1989
German
study
found
that
people
who
steamed
twice a
week got
half as
many
colds as
those
who
didn't.
One
theory:
When you
take a
sauna
you
inhale
air
hotter
than 80
degrees,
a
temperature
too hot
for cold
and flu
viruses
to
survive.
#6 Get
Fresh
Air
A
regular
dose of
fresh
air is
important,
especially
in cold
weather
when
central
heating
dries
you out
and
makes
your
body
more
vulnerable
to cold
and flu
viruses.
Also,
during
cold
weather
more
people
stay
indoors,
which
means
more
germs
are
circulating
in
crowded,
dry
rooms.
Credit
www.WebMD.com






























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