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Old 02-27-07 | 02:49 PM
  #108  
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closetbiker
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Joined: Feb 2003
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From: Vancouver, BC
Originally Posted by Cyclaholic
That articre started off being about helmets but wandered off on some vague sidetrip about kids getting poisoned with aspirin and contracting asthma because their house is too clean, all too confusing for this simple mind.

So what's the conclusion? do we wear helmets when riding in the dirt so we dont get asthma, and if we do get asthma don't take aspirin because it might poison us even if we're wearing our helmet when taking it? and what about wearing a wig, what's that all about? do we have to wear wigs to ride our bicycles now? and will we get asthma if we wash our wigs too often? I'm confused.... I'm going for a bike ride, where's my wig... oh no it's in the wash! better take my inhaler then.
Don't be confused. You don't even have to watch the whole show to get the message. It's right there in the headline,

The Surprising Risks of Playing It Safe
Even Being Careful Has Unintended Consequences

..."When people don't cycle, they're not getting exercise," he said. "We know that not getting exercise and being sedentary is incredibly dangerous. You get heart attacks, you get strokes … proven killers that kill thousands of people...

Unintended consequences of well-intended safety rules are not unusual. In 1972, the FDA passed a law requiring child safety caps on many medications... Because these safety caps are often so hard to get off, some people — particularly older people — just leave them off altogether, and some parents, feeling protected by the cap, leave the aspirin where kids can reach it.

A study on the "lulling effect" concluded that an additional 3,500 children have been poisoned by aspirin because of the regulation.

A second example: You may have seen the warnings about anti-depressants. The FDA demanded that a black box be added to every package. The unintended consequence? Prescriptions to anti-depressants dropped 20 percent. And with fewer teenagers taking the medication, many experts say they are seeing more teen suicide...

And here's an odd one. Most of us, when we have a new baby in the house, make an extra effort to keep the house especially clean. I was no exception. But now there's research suggesting that kids who are exposed to more endotoxins — mild dust, bacteria, pollen, like kids who go to daycare or have pets or live on farms — are less likely to develop allergies and asthma.

So go for your bike ride Cyclaholic, it'll be the safest decision you'll make all day.
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