The 8 parts of the body you should never touch, the danger is great... [ FOTO]
![The 8 parts of the body you should never touch, the danger is great... [ FOTO]](/assets/placeholder.webp)
Our hands are covered with microbes that can spread to more sensitive parts of our body, and in some cases, affecting certain areas, we risk transmitting viruses and bacteria to other people. A series of bad habits are likely to be harmful to our health, but [...]
Our hands are covered with microbes that can spread to more sensitive parts of our body, and in some cases, affecting certain areas, we risk transmitting viruses and bacteria to other people. A series of bad habits are likely to be harmful to our health but also to the health of people around us.
Keep your hands off your face
Just look around, maybe in the morning at the bar, to see how many people are sitting drinking coffee and reading the newspaper with their faces in their hands.
But if you're not washing your face or applying any cream, your hands should stand still!
This is the advice of microbiologist Matthew Lee, interviewed by Reader's Digest.
So, to keep your face clean and unscrewd is better not to touch your face.
Keep your hands off your eyes
The eyes are extremely sensitive: touching them with your hands is likely to represent germs, but you are at risk of accidentally introducing micro-grins of dirt that can cause frustration and scratch.
If you need to contact your eyes, it is advisable to wash your hands completely before doing so.
It's also good to resist the impulse to erase your eyes because this long - term approach contributes to deteriorating wrinkles and dark circles.
Keep your hands off your ears
There's a very delicate space in our ears, and that's why it's better to avoid getting your hands on your ear to remove the wax.
Not only because it is a very attractive gesture but not to damage the ear channel that is too thin.
It is also known that cotton trees are harmful and should not be used to clean ears: The wax plays a natural act of lubrication and protection, but if it is accidentally pushed deep into the ear, it is likely to carry with it even viruses and bacteria and subsequent infections.
Keep your hands off your nose.
There are healthy bacteria inside the nose that protect from pathogens, but if we put our fingers in the nose, it is easy to introduce bad bacteria that can cause infection.
Also, if you are cold or have respiratory diseases, friction of your nose will spread bacteria out, especially problematic behavior during the flu season.
Keep your hands off your mouth
One person's mouth holds an average of 34 to 72 kinds of bacteria.
Most are harmless, some are even useful to oral health, but an increase in additional germs can disrupt the balance of the mouth and increase the chances of getting sick.
So it is best not to put your hands in your mouth after touching your computer keyboard, bus handle, or toilet door.
Moreover, if you are sick, like your nose, it is easy to transfer mouth germs out and people around you.
Keep your hands away from the rear
This especially pleases children - putting their hands on the inside and touching the hinds!
But contact with the anal is also a way to spread dangerous microbes such as Eserichia coli.
It is recommended that your hands be washed after the defiche.
Putting your hands in your mouth or in your eyes because you touch your hinds is not a good idea because the infection is around.
Keep your hands off the belly button
Did you know that the belly button is the dirt part of the body?
The belly actually has an overcrowding of bacteria and is largely elusive because of its shape and may remain contaminated after a shower.
A recent experiment by the University of North Carolina has identified 1400 different types of bacteria.
Wrinkling the navel with unclean hands can lead to infections.
Keep your hands off your nails
It may seem impossible to carry nails and hands separated!
Many spots and bacteria are hidden under the nails of hands and feet.

















