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[music] Hello, I’m Dr. Neal Schultz
[pause]
and welcome to DermTV.
On the rare occasions that I go to the beach I am usually worried about the
sun, but there are many beachgoers that are concerned about getting sick
from beach water and we have certainly heard in the news about beaches
being closed because garbage and waste washes up on the shore. But what
about the sand, does the sand pose any peril to your health, you bet it
does. It turns out that the sand is a very large reservoir for all sorts of
bacteria from bird dropping, to other animals, and even from sewage that
washes up from the water. The way in which that bacteria makes us sick is
usually because it gets on our hands and from our hands we transfer it to
our mouth.
Recently a collaborate study was done be a private organization and the
environmental protection agency, they questioned 25,000 beachgoers about an
illnesses that they developed within a few days of having gone to the
beach, and it turns out that less than 10 percent of them reported any
illnesses in those few days. But of the people that played in the sand and
particularly the people who dug in the sand, there were 13 percent more apt
to have a stomach illness, 20 percent more apt to have diarrhea, and with
children under the age of 11 the numbers were even higher. Be careful
before you decide to bury yourself in the sand because of the people that
did that of the adults 27 percent were more apt to have diarrhea and 44
percent of the children were more apt to have diarrhea.
So just the way I do not tell you to not go into the sun but rather I tell
you how to protect yourself in the sun, I am not telling anybody not to go
to the beach and not to dig in the sand, I am just telling you how to do it
more safely. So at the end of the day and when you are finished digging in
the sand, make sure you have hand sanitizer with you to clean your hands
and shower off as soon as you can, and of course wear sunscreen.