Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by zeroexzeroone 4773 days ago
I can definitely see how this could make people more sick, though I work in an open office and I rarely get sick, could be genetics or it could be that I eat food grown locally, work out and run every day and generally have alot of fun outside of work.

The human body NEEDS to get sick to build anti-bodies - without these then you will get sick more often. The American way of "Take antibiotics or medicine as soon as you get sick!" is one of the worst habits of my beloved American people (and fast food).

1 comments

Curious, do you get much sun? Vitamin D definciency commonly results in sickly people too.
You don't need much. National Institutes of Health recommends 5-30 minutes of daytime exposure, twice a week. [1]

http://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminD-HealthProfessional...

Yes, we need several minutes of strong (near noon-time) sun across a significant portion of the body. More if you don't drink fortified milk. Winter and old age increase the need.

These days it is common for people to avoid the sun and use excessive sunscreen if they do; geeks are not known for their tans. But a few minutes sunbathing is definitely beneficial.

The govt is a tad behind on this, but it has recently upped the recommendations.

Sorry but I don't trust anything with .gov to tell me what my body can already tell me. We have to learn to listen to it.
> tell me what my body can already tell me

Your body doesn't always exhibit signs of something wrong, and there are many instances in which that's it's true and it's too late to take action. I had to get a birthmark removed from my back last summer because it could've been a malignant type of skin cancer. I certainly didn't "feel" anything from it, and wouldn't have known about it until a dermatologist pointed it out to me.

Should have gotten a double mastectomy, that would have made more sense.
I do get quite a bit of sun, most of my fun is outside.