How to Live - Eugene Lyman Fisk (top 100 novels of all time .txt) 📗
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Overheated rooms should also be avoided for the same reason. In rooms where people are moving about, the temperature should not be allowed to rise above 65 degrees. In ordinary offices or dwelling rooms, the temperature should not be allowed to rise above 68 degrees and adequate ventilation should be provided.
Living out of doors, especially sleeping out, gives the skin exercise, and further keeps fresh air in the lungs. It is one of the foremost methods of prevention against colds. Army men remark that so long as they are out of doors, even if exposed to bad weather, they almost never catch cold, but do so often as soon as they resume living in houses.
Long breaths taken slowly and rhythmically, say ten at a time and ten times a day are helpful.
Constipation predisposes to colds, and should be vigorously combated by proper diet and exercise, and regular habits of attention to the bowel function.
Overeating frequently leads to nasal congestion. Eat lightly, using little meat or other high protein foods such as white of eggs, and thoroughly masticate the food.
Avoiding undue fatigue will help greatly in preventing colds.
The regular use of nasal douches is not advisable. The mucous membrane of the nose is intolerant of watery solutions, and a chronic congested condition or even infection of air cavities in the skull can be brought about by the constant use of sprays and douches. Where special conditions render it necessary, these should be used only on the advice of a physician. When the nose is clogged with soot or dust, a very gentle spray of a warm, weak solution of salt and water, in the anterior nostrils, may do no harm. Picking of the nose should be strictly avoided. This is a fertile cause of infection. In blowing the nose care should be taken to close one nostril completely and to blow through the other without undue force. Otherwise, infection may be carried into the ear passages or the cavities communicating with the nose and give rise to serious trouble. When suffering from a cold, gauze or cheese-cloth should be used instead of a handkerchief and burned after use. Sneeze into the gauze, and thus avoid spraying infection into the surrounding atmosphere.
After one has actually caught cold the rules above given for preventing a cold are in most particulars reversed. One should then avoid drafts, variable temperature and any severe “skin gymnastics.” The paradox, that exposure to drafts is preventive of colds, but is likely to add to the cold after it is caught, is not more surprizing than the paradox that exercise keeps a man well, but that when he is sick it is better to rest.
After a cold has actually been contracted, the great effort should be to keep the body thoroughly warm, especially the feet. To accomplish this it is often the wisest course for one who has a cold to remain in bed a full day at the outset.
Medical treatment by a physician can always mitigate and shorten the duration of a cold and lessen the danger of complications, the symptoms of which can not always be appreciated by the patient.
Among the most effective home remedies for a cold are the hot foot-bath, 110–115 degrees F., a hot drink (e.g. hot flaxseed tea), a thorough purge, and rubbing the neck and chest with camphorated oil. The hot foot-bath should usually last 20 minutes, and be taken in a very thorough manner, the body enveloped in a blanket. After taking the bath, the patient should go directly to bed, and not move about and neutralize its good results.
A general neutral bath not above 100 or below 95 degrees is very restful to the skin and nerves as they have absolutely nothing to do to cope with temperatures above or below that of the body, since the neutral bath has the same as that of the body. One can remain in such a bath even for hours, if one has the time, but in getting out, it is very important to be in a very warm room and to dress quickly. In fact there is very considerable danger of catching cold at this time if great care is not taken.
If one does not remain in bed, it is generally safer to keep indoors. The air of the room should be kept as fresh as possible without subjecting one’s self to a draft and should also be kept humidified, especially in winter when it is apt to be exceedingly dry. Either excessive dryness or excessive moisture is a strain on the mucous membrane, which is the directly diseased organ in the case of a cold. If the day is still and sunny, being out of doors, if well protected from any chill, may help to get rid of one’s cold, but on a damp windy day the chances are one will add to the cold.
As to eating, it is sometimes wise to absolutely fast by skipping a meal or two, using nothing but water or water with agar-agar, or food which has bulk but little food value, such as green vegetables or fruit. The common idea that one should “stuff a cold and starve a fever” is most erroneous and comes apparently from a misunderstanding of the meaning of this adage which, originally, it would appear, was not meant in the imperative sense at all, but as follows: “If you stuff a cold, you will have to starve a fever.”
It should be added that whisky and heavy doses of quinine are distinctly deleterious and should be avoided, as should all quack remedies and catarrh cures; there are more effective remedies which carry no possibilities of harm.
When one is getting over a cold it is a good time to resolve to avoid catching colds altogether, which for the average person can be substantially accomplished by following the above suggestions. The tax on one’s time thus required is far less than the tax required by the colds themselves. The authors of this book know of persons who have scarcely lost a day’s work from colds or other ailments for decades at a time simply by using a little self-control and common sense at critical times.
SECTION VIISIGNS OF INCREASE OF THE DEGENERATIVE DISEASES
The fact that in the United States the general death rate has steadily fallen for the past several decades, a phenomenon common to all civilized countries, is accepted by many as evidence of a steady gain in National Vitality. That there has been a gain in vitality in the younger age groups is unquestionably true, but this gain has served to mask a loss in vitality at the older age periods.
This latter phenomenon, a rising mortality in elderly life, is something almost peculiar to the United States. It is not exhibited in the mortality statistics of the leading European countries. In those countries the fall in the death rate has not been due solely to a reduction of mortality in infancy and adult life through the conquest of diseases of children, tuberculosis and other communicable diseases. England and Wales, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Prussia show improved mortality at every age period.
The charts in this section show the trend of mortality in this country during 30 years at the various ages of life, and also the trend of mortality in the two great classes of diseases: the communicable, which affect more emphatically the young lives, and the degenerative or regressive class of diseases, which affect chiefly those in middle life and old age.
It seems evident that unless this increased mortality is due to some unknown biologic influence or to the amalgamation of the various races that constitute our population, it must be ascribed, in a broad sense, to lack of adaptation to our rapidly developing civilization.
Whether or not there is one principal cause that determines the unfavorable trend of mortality in this country as compared to other civilized nations has not yet been conclusively shown.
This chart exhibits the trend of the death rate from all causes, by age periods. The decreases are below the center line and the increases above it.
It will be noted that the American decreases in the younger ages were not as great as in England and Wales, that they changed to increases about age 45 and continued to increase in each age group thereafter, while in England and Wales the decline occurred at all ages.
Note.—Massachusetts and New Jersey are used as a basis because they were the only States in 1880 where sufficiently reliable comparative statistics could be had. These records were accepted by the national government, and these States really constituted the registration area in that year. There were also fifteen cities outside these States where comparisons were possible.
This chart shows that in the United States registration area, the mortality from diseases of the heart, blood vessels and kidneys increased 41 per cent. during the period 1890–1910, while in England and Wales (shown by the dotted lines) during the same period there was a decrease in the mortality from these maladies.
OCCUPIED MALES INCREASES-DECREASES FROM CERTAIN DISEASES
OCCUPIED MALES INCREASES-DECREASES FROM CERTAIN DISEASESThis chart comparing 1900 with 1890 (1900–1910 not yet available) shows the sharp upward trend in the mortality from organic disease among males in gainful occupations, and the downward trend in the mortality from communicable disease in the same group. This heavy and increasing loss from chronic disease occurs among our most valuable lives—those of the breadwinners.
SECTION VIIICOMPARISON OF DEGENERATIVE TENDENCIES AMONG NATIONS DEATH RATE PER 1,000 OF POPULATION BY AGE PERIODS IN THE UNITED STATES[R] AND IN VARIOUS EUROPEAN COUNTRIES.[S] Ages U. S. Reg. Area 1900 P’sons Prussia 1900–01 France 1899–1902 Italy 1899–1902 Sweden 1891–00 Males Fem. Males Fem. Males Fem. Males Fem. Under 1 165.4 221.8 189.4 ... ... 174.8 158.3 ... 101.6 1 46.6 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 2 20.5 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 3 13.2 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 4 9.4 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Under 5 52.1 24.3 23.4 56.9 48.5 38.4 39.8 ... 36.9 5–9 5.2 4.9 5.1 4.6 4.6 6.1 6.7 ... 5.9 10–14 3.3 2.7 3.0 2.9 3.5 3.2 3.8 ... 3.6 15–19 5.2 4.2 3.7 4.9 5.2 4.6 5.4 4.6 4.7 20–24 7.5 5.8 4.7 7.8 6.4 6.8 7.0 6.7 5.7 25–29 8.6 5.8 6.0 8.0 8.0 6.7 7.6 6.6 6.1 30–34 9.4 6.7 6.7 8.5 7.8 6.7 7.9 6.7 6.5 35–39 11.0 9.0 7.8 10.5 8.8 7.5 8.6 7.6 7.2 40–44 12.2 12.1 8.6 12.7 9.7 9.3 9.1 8.8 7.9 45–49 15.2 15.9 10.0 15.1 10.9 11.4 9.6 10.7 8.6 50–54 19.1 21.2 13.8 19.1 14.5 15.7 12.9 13.7 10.9 55–59 26.3 28.3 20.4 26.6 20.5 21.0 17.7 18.6 14.3 60–64 35.1 39.5 31.4 37.4 30.5 33.5 30.9 26.1 21.3 65–69 52.2 57.8 50.3 54.5 47.1 50.2 48.8 39.5 33.8 70–74 75.2 87.0 78.9 86.9 77.7 85.4 87.4 62.0 54.8 75–79 110.5 132.5 125.3 130.7 120.6 134.3 138.5 101.3 90.1 80–84 165.8 199.3 186.6 ... ... 214.5 215.6 ... ... 85–89 241.3 283.6 271.4 221.9 219.8 317.1 307.3 197.8 179.6 90–94 339.2 395.2 345.6 ... ... ... ... ... ... 95–over 418.9 404.8 402.1 ... ... 391.7 369.1 ... ...
Note: In 1900 or thereabouts, the death rates at the middle ages of life were heavier in the United States than in Prussia, France, Italy, and Sweden. Since then the death rates in the United States at these ages have grown even greater.
In the foreign countries
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