The clipon tie thing is pretty damn sad. Although, about 5 years ago, there was a brief movement for clip on ties and mandatory tie tacks for medical professionals, which I was 1000% behind... the reason? In a randomized test, 98% of freshly laundered doctors' ties which had been worn for 6 hours or less were contaminated with bacteria. And we're not talking the little guys, either... I believe it was 60-something percent with MRSA, 80-something percent with E. coli and 90-something percent with staph aureus (numbers off the top of my head, as this was a while ago).
It happens, of course, because the doc comes in, washes his hands, sees the patient, leaves, adjusts his tie, and sees the next patient.
The study encompassed several large hospitals as well as private practices and clinics, and was large enough to conclude that greater than half of the crossinfections one finds in hospitals aren't from the nurses, but from the docs who can't keep their hands off their ties.
I won't let them touch me unless they've washed their hands right in front of me... with soap, not just run them under the faucet. My super awesome asthma doc of awesomeness got me in the habit and told me that any doc who refused to wash their hands *with soap* before examining me wasn't worthy of touching me *anyway*. I miss her a lot.
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That's a very, very, very large... set of legs.
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It happens, of course, because the doc comes in, washes his hands, sees the patient, leaves, adjusts his tie, and sees the next patient.
The study encompassed several large hospitals as well as private practices and clinics, and was large enough to conclude that greater than half of the crossinfections one finds in hospitals aren't from the nurses, but from the docs who can't keep their hands off their ties.
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My favorite thing about the Giro was seeing that Scarponi (Friday's stage winner) had even skinner legs than me!
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