Myth: If You Go Outside With Wet Hair, Youâll Catch a Cold
A well-meaning grandparent might have shared this tip when you were a child, but assistant nursing professor and nurse practitioner Ashley Apple said this bit of popular wisdom depends on how you parse it.
âSimply going outside with wet hair doesnât make you more likely to encounter a virus,â Apple said.
But there has been research to suggest that if the temperature in your nasal passages drops, your body is less able to fight off a virus. Peopleâs noses contain tissue that help fight off infections. Research suggests when the temperature inside your nose drops by as little as 9 degrees, these tissues are less capable of facilitating an innate immune response and neutralizing viruses.
âGiven that a lot of heat dissipates through your head, your overall temperature and the temperature inside your nose might decrease,â Apple said. âIf you are exposed to a virus during that time period, your body might be less able to fight that virus.â
To avoid getting a cold, Apple advised following the same tips you learned in elementary school: Wash your hands, and cough and sneeze into your elbow rather than your hands.
âYou donât need to get earmuffs for your nose,â Apple said.
Myth: Cracking Your Knuckles Gives You Arthritis
It might be annoying to the people around you, but thereâs not much evidence to suggest this habit causes arthritis.
âCracking your knuckles really just displaces air and the fluid that is in your joint spaces, and it makes a crunch when you do it,â Apple said.
But Apple suggests you might want to avoid cracking your knuckles anyway. People who do so excessively can have increased swelling in their joints, a weaker grip and other functional impairments.
There are many kinds of arthritis, and genetics make some people more likely to develop the condition than others.
If youâre worried about your joint health, there are some things you can do. Apple recommends trying to maintain good nutrition â and especially making sure you get enough calcium and vitamin D â to keep your bones strong. Being active and working on your flexibility can also help prevent arthritis.
Myth: Your Body Temperature Should Be 98.6 Degrees Fahrenheit
For most of our lives, our average body temperature is somewhere around 98.6 degrees, according to nursing professor Gina DeGennaro and assistant nursing professor Beth Quatrara. As people age, however, their average body temperature tends to decrease.
Usually, 100.4 degrees or higher is the benchmark when medical professionals consider a person to be running a fever.
âIf you had a patient who was at 97 when they came in, and now theyâre at 99, thatâs a big difference,â DeGennaro said. âIn an older individual or someoneâs who immunocompromised, that would be very concerning.â
âThere were patients in the hospital with COVID who had no fever, yet were in very serious condition,â Quatrara said.
DeGennaro and Quatrara say they didnât learn how temperature changes as a person ages when they were in nursing school, but share the information with their students now. As someone gets older, or if they are immunocompromised or malnourished, their protein levels decrease, making it more difficult for their immune system to sustain a fever.
If youâre trying to monitor body temperature at home, the nursing professors recommended sticking to a traditional thermometer for the most accurate reading, though they warned that whether someone has had anything to eat or drink recently can skew the reading.
They also suggested keeping an eye on other symptoms, like confusion, fatigue, muscle aches or even changing personality.
âGo with your gut. Donât rely on the number,â Quatrara said.
Myth: Juice Cleanses Can Help You âDetoxifyâ
Wellness influencers might peddle $100 five-day juice cleanses to help you âeliminate toxins.â But odds are, your body is already doing that for you.
âWe hear all the time about potential âtoxinsâ in the environment, and people are worried about what that means for their health,â Apple said. âSome juices have things that are good for you and your immune system, like vitamin C, but thereâs really no evidence to support a juice cleanse.â
To get rid of the toxins people encounter every day (like the mercury in fish, for example), they need nutrients from fat and protein.
âIf you do a juice cleanse, thatâs just carbohydrates. You might be taking in less toxins overall, but youâre not feeding the body the nutrients it needs to detoxify itself,â Apple said.
Instead, just aim for a balanced diet, Apple said.