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this post was submitted on 22 Dec 2024
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Asklemmy
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You sound like a germophobe, to be honest. Yes, your situation is gross, but the human immune system is pretty amazing. Just look at how many people in New York City survive every day in a melting pot of subway germs.
Fecal matter and other organic waste can transmit disease and infection, especially if you get it in an open wound, but the chances of that happening if you clean and dress the wound soon after are very low. Even if a wound does get infected, we have medicine that can deal with that easily as long as it isn’t allowed to persist for a long time.
In my opinion, it sounds a little bit like you could benefit from therapy to become more comfortable with these feelings of revulsion towards normal exposure to germs. It is good to have sanitizer and stuff ready when you need it, but you also don’t need to suffer through continued panic after cleaning and disinfecting yourself from a gross exposure.
Thank you, this is what I needed to hear.
NO if you were describing your situation even half-way accurately, the above comment is DANGEROUS.
Tbch I am a germophobe, so yes, I kinda needed to hear that, I won't stop taking precautions, but his assurance helped me not be extra Paranoid.
You sound like a germophobe, to be honest. /s
You sound like a realitiophobe.
Fwiw, as a NYer, I'm basically perpetually sick. Even with masking and sanitizer.
It's even worse with roommates or a partner since any time one person catches something, it's bound to spread to the others
did you read the post? OP is describing shit flowing down the street. You seem to be under the FALSE impression this is mainly dangerous if it gets in a wound. Not at all considering what if it gets into the digestive system to name but one other point of entry. Try reading the first few paragraphs of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WASH and skimming around. I don't see a lot of "germ phobia" being discussed here.
this is critically dangerous which will certainly result in extreme illness in the neighborhood. People die from these kinds of situations. They tend not to be accompanied by robust health systems or other supports. There has obviously been neglect / catastrophe on the public health front.
Your advice is patronizing, inane, ignorant... and dangerous.