6 Medical Myths for the Holiday Season

epiphany65

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Here's a fun, informative article on studies that dispel age-old myths we all may believe. The article has hyperlinks to other stories, so you might want to read it to follow them.

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/12/18/medical-myths-for-the-holiday-season/?hp

Last year, the British medical journal BMJ reported on a series of medical myths that even doctors believe. Among them: Turkey makes you drowsy. Dim light ruins your eyes. Drink at last eight glasses of water a day.

This year, the same researchers, Dr. Aaron Carroll and Dr. Rachel Vreeman of the Indiana University School of Medicine, offer six new medical myths for the holiday season. The latest set of myths, published this month in BMJ, are commonly believed by the general public and many doctors, said the researchers. However, a search of the medical literature shows these myths aren’t true or lack evidence to support them.

“Even widely held medical beliefs require examination or re-examination,” the study authors wrote. “Both physicians and non-physicians sometimes believe things about our bodies that just are not true.”

Here are the six new commonly believed medical myths they’ve identified.

1. Sugar makes kids hyperactive.

The researchers cite 12 controlled studies that couldn’t detect any differences in behavior between children who had sugar and those who did not. Even when kids had a diagnosis of hyperactivity problems or were said to be more sensitive to sugar, they did not behave differently whether they ate sugar-laden or sugar-free diets. In fact, the biggest effect of sugar may be on parents. Parents rate their children as being more hyperactive if they are told the child has consumed sugar — even when the child hasn’t really had any sweets.

2. Suicide increases over the holidays.

Suicides are more common during warm and sunny times of the year, studies show. There is no evidence of a holiday peak in suicides.

3. Poinsettias are toxic.

Among 22,793 poinsettia exposures reported to the American Association of Poison Control Centers, there were no deaths or significant poisonings. A study of poinsettia ingestion found that when rats were given doses equal to a person consuming 500 to 600 poinsettia leaves, the plant wasn’t toxic.

4. You lose most of your body heat through your head.

This is the myth that Dr. Carroll and Dr. Vreeman believed to be true. They found out that the belief likely originated with an old military study where subjects wearing arctic survival suits lost most of their body heat through their heads. But that was because the head was the only bare part of their bodies. Typically, we don’t lose more than 10 percent of body heat through our heads. The bottom line is that any uncovered part of the body will lose heat, which is why wearing a hat, even when you’re bundled up everywhere else, is important.

5. Night eating makes you fat.

Studies show an association between obesity and eating more meals late in the day, but that doesn’t mean eating at night causes obesity, the doctors point out. Eating more at any time of day will cause weight gain if it results in ingesting more calories than you need.

6. Hangovers can be cured.

The researchers found no scientific evidence supporting any type of cure for alcohol hangovers. Because hangovers are caused by drinking too much alcohol, the only way to avoid one is to drink very little or not at all.

Next year, the doctors plan to provide more research on medical myths in their new book, “Don’t Swallow Your Gum: Myths, Half-Truths, and Outright Lies About Your Body and Health,” to be published by St. Martin’s Press.
 
...6. Hangovers can be cured.

The researchers found no scientific evidence supporting any type of cure for alcohol hangovers. Because hangovers are caused by drinking too much alcohol, the only way to avoid one is to drink very little or not at all...

This is one myth that I was never in any danger of believing. Hangovers are nature's way of telling you: drinking isn't good for you— don't do that again.

After a certain age, hangovers do nothing but get worse. When you're young and stupid, you can abuse your body in any number of ways and suffer little in the way of consequences. Thereafter, there's hell to pay. It's one reason I quit drinking to excess when I was comparatively young. These days, I go for months without consuming any alcohol. An occasional social drink is one thing; daring the gods of retribution is something else entirely— the "pain-pleasure calculus" ( a/k/a the "cost-benefit analysis" ) is heavily weighted in one direction.


 
3. Poinsettias are toxic.

Among 22,793 poinsettia exposures reported to the American Association of Poison Control Centers, there were no deaths or significant poisonings. A study of poinsettia ingestion found that when rats were given doses equal to a person consuming 500 to 600 poinsettia leaves, the plant wasn’t toxic.
I could have told you about this one. My cats ate an entire poinsettia down to the stems and suffered no ill effects. They did, however, hack up the silk one.
 
5. Night eating makes you fat.

Studies show an association between obesity and eating more meals late in the day, but that doesn’t mean eating at night causes obesity, the doctors point out. Eating more at any time of day will cause weight gain if it results in ingesting more calories than you need.
True that. When you eat has nothing to do with your weight. Only how much you eat and how much you need.

But I heard this from a nutritionist, who added a caveat to busting this myth:

Night eating can make you pudgy. Because if you eat and then rest or sleep a long time, you store the extra calories in different parts of the body, than if you stay active and burn calories after eating. Generally in areas that makes people look fatter. Belly, hips, man boobs, you name it.

...this is, if you eat a little bit too much, so you have some fat reserves, but not too much. At some point it's no big difference, and you'll look fat anyway. Because you are.
 
6. Hangovers can be cured.

The researchers found no scientific evidence supporting any type of cure for alcohol hangovers. Because hangovers are caused by drinking too much alcohol, the only way to avoid one is to drink very little or not at all.

Half true. A major problem when a person drinks is that alcohol is hygroscopic. Large amounts of alcohol will grab water from the body's cells. The damage to the cells is a large part of the hangover. There are two ways to attack the problem, other than not drinking. 1) Ingest quite a bit of water after you finish drinking. The water will re-hydrate your body. 2) Alcohol is the body's preferred fuel. Enough exercise will burn the alcohol off.

I had to go to a retirement party for a guy I worked with. The way things were structured, I had to drink five cups of beer in a short time. Some idiot had goten 16 ounce cups instead of 12 ounce cups. By the time I finished 80 ounces of beer I was drunk. The party was at the beach, near where I lived. I staggered home put on my bathing suit and ran the beach. I normally ran on the beach and I knew other peopl who ran on the beach. I passed a few guys who normally ran at near my normal pace. I flew past the guys and covered the three miles to the jetty in what must have been record time. I then ran back up the beach and encountered a guy who was just starting, after I had covered 4 1/2 miles. I flew past the guy and got to about 5 1/2 miles and then I suddenly began to feel the effects of my very fast run. I pushed on and finished 6 miles. I was, by then, stone, cold sober. I went home had supper and went to bed. In the morning I had no trace of hangover.
 
I learned the 'drink water' gig inna Army. Given what a lightweight drinker I am, it saved a whole bunch of pain. Also, you can prevent being hung over by drinking a glass of olive oil before you start on the alky. I know that sounds like an Italian supersticion but the U.S. State Dept. recommends it, too.
 
Actually, I get much milder hangovers than I used to when I was in my 20s and 30s.

Whenever I have felt hungover, I've found a specific for it to be orange juice. I'd heard that alcohol alters your pH, making it more basic than usual, and the citric acid puts it back in balance. At least it tastes especially good and hits the spot.

As far as the hyperactivity thing, I hold it's not sugar per se, that affects kids, but starch. When my son was young enough so that eating at places like Ryan's and Golden Corral was a good deal, we went there fairly often. And he'd get mac and cheese and mashed potatoes and those big, soft rolls that both places feature. And at some point after dinner, he would become unmanageable. We called him the Starch Hare.
 
Actually, I get much milder hangovers than I used to when I was in my 20s and 30s.

Whenever I have felt hungover, I've found a specific for it to be orange juice. I'd heard that alcohol alters your pH, making it more basic than usual, and the citric acid puts it back in balance. At least it tastes especially good and hits the spot.

As far as the hyperactivity thing, I hold it's not sugar per se, that affects kids, but starch. When my son was young enough so that eating at places like Ryan's and Golden Corral was a good deal, we went there fairly often. And he'd get mac and cheese and mashed potatoes and those big, soft rolls that both places feature. And at some point after dinner, he would become unmanageable. We called him the Starch Hare.

I've found that juice or milk is best for me after tying one on. I'm 43... maybe as we get older and our metabolism changes we process things like booze differently. That could account for the milder hangovers. Or it could just be a higher tolerance, I don't know.
 
I've found that juice or milk is best for me after tying one on. I'm 43... maybe as we get older and our metabolism changes we process things like booze differently. That could account for the milder hangovers. Or it could just be a higher tolerance, I don't know.

Probably higher tolerance, plus the fact that we stick to wine and don't get into the tequila and stuff as much anymore.
 
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