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GeneralRe: Here is one for you Pin
Richard Andrew x6418-Mar-14 13:15
professionalRichard Andrew x6418-Mar-14 13:15 
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Jörgen Andersson18-Mar-14 20:41
professionalJörgen Andersson18-Mar-14 20:41 
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Kyudos18-Mar-14 12:19
Kyudos18-Mar-14 12:19 
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_Maxxx_18-Mar-14 12:31
professional_Maxxx_18-Mar-14 12:31 
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Kyudos18-Mar-14 15:55
Kyudos18-Mar-14 15:55 
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_Maxxx_18-Mar-14 16:04
professional_Maxxx_18-Mar-14 16:04 
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Marc Clifton18-Mar-14 13:31
mvaMarc Clifton18-Mar-14 13:31 
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Bill_Hallahan18-Mar-14 16:34
Bill_Hallahan18-Mar-14 16:34 
Proper handwashing promotes wellness in child care
JP Niffenegger - Journal of Pediatric Health Care, 1997 - Elsevier
http://www.jpedhc.org/article/S0891-5245%2897%2990141-3/abstract


The effect of a soap promotion and hygiene education campaign on handwashing behaviour in rural India: a cluster randomised trial
Adam Biran, Wolf-Peter Schmidt, et. al., Tropical Medicine & International Health
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-3156.2009.02373.x/full

Those are just abstracts though, but those are old studies.

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Now, for facts that I have read in several places, but do not have references I can cite. (You predicted you would get such facts, and I won't disappoint you - beside, you only asked for peer-reviewed articles, but not for such articles for every single statement that is made!) One of these places where I read such facts is Scientific American, and in the specific issue, I believe there was a peer-reviewed reference for the fact I am about to relate. The fact is, there are more bacteria cells in the human body that are not the body's cells, i.e. they have different DNA, then there are human cells in the human body!

Also, if interested in the spread of disease, then the question about a statistically significant difference in bacteria with washing and not washing is not the only relevant question. Bacteria are a part of the human ecosystem. Certain types of bacteria that can be picked up in the environment are more likely to cause disease than the natural bacteria that exist in the body. Or to put it more accurately, there are both bad and good bacteria in the human body, but mostly good ones that consume resources and keep the bad bacteria in-check.

----------------

By the way, another real peer-reviewed study, which again I cannot cite, found that children raised with pets had fewer allergies later in life than those who were raised in very clean environments. I know a lot about allergies as I am very allergic to a number of things and I've been treated by a Harvard-educated allergist who related a lot of information I won't go into here. Allergies are caused by the body's immune system attacking things that aren't bad. The theory is that the children with pets had more exposure to bacteria, which primes a young child's immune system to learn what to attack and what to ignore. That, however, is just a theory and has not yet been proven.

In other words, avoiding bacteria too much can be bad too, particularly when young. But it is clear that washing hands is good to avoid the spread of disease.
GeneralRe: Here is one for you Pin
firegryphon19-Mar-14 5:59
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Xapp19-Mar-14 3:48
Xapp19-Mar-14 3:48 
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Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr.19-Mar-14 3:52
Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr.19-Mar-14 3:52 
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Herbie Mountjoy19-Mar-14 4:46
professionalHerbie Mountjoy19-Mar-14 4:46 
QuestionNostalgia in Programming Pin
Chris Maunder18-Mar-14 9:32
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OriginalGriff18-Mar-14 10:16
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Mark H218-Mar-14 10:48
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KP Lee19-Mar-14 8:06
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Gary Wheeler19-Mar-14 0:37
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