- Not everyone in the hospital is immunocompromised.
- Any level higher than necessary (e.g. unwashed); there is no magic tipping point. If someone was infected, it could have been from a dirty gi or a clean gi (or the mat, the persons skin, etc, etc.). We're just trying to "minimize" probability here, and keeping a clean gi is one contibuting factor toward that goal. Same goes with cleaning a mat, staying showered, etc.
Or not grappling at all.
- Anything that can harbor infectious microorganisms is a possible source of infection. The more organisms it harbors, the more likely it is. If you've got an unwashed gi, that's an unecessary potential source of infection.
Washing a gi when you practice all days, work and/or study on the same time is more than unecessary when that potential danger is not statistically significant.
Not living in a bubble is also an unecessary risk i guess.
- No, I didn't say it would be dirtier. I said it's silly not to wash it in between sessions. Certainly if you roll 5 hrs you'll have picked up more bugs than in 1 hr.
Sorry but taking away years of use of a gi because an statistically insignificant risk is not unecessary.
However, regardless of the number of hours you rolled you should wash between uses so that you don't accumulate potentially pathogenic organisms. It's very simple.
Its not that simple, every wash takes away the life of a gi, and for some people its a big amount of work and/or cash to simply load the washing for every single gi, when hang drying a sweaty gi wont statistically increase the dangers of getting a disease.
Why do we have to have a specific criteria by which we can officially label your dirty ass gi biohazardous material? That's ridiculous... just wash the damn thing! And, while a clean gi may be an unlikely place to pickup an infectious agent, a dirty one is a likely place. It's silly.
Again, how much does a gi stays clean? by finishing warmup i would have already grappled with as much as 3 guys and its dripping in sweat, so what's the difference there?
And, the US doesn't have poor healthcare. The argument is in our delivery system. Many people are angry it's not socialist enough. Our quality of care is amazing. The only stats that show otherwise are ridiculous stats like infant mortality.
Unfortunately, countries report their own infant mortality rates. And, they all have their own unique criteria for what constitutes and infant mortality. We try to save everyrhing and consider it all an infant mortality, whereas some countries will not consider something an infant mortality unless the child failed to live over 1 week! As you can see, that will lead to obviously skewed data. So, our poor infant mortality rate is really the result of us working harder to save babies and being more honest with what we report.
Maybe if people werent so eager to sue for malpractice costs would be cheaper.
Keep your ignorant statements to yourself. I'm not telling you how things are in environmental science... so, don't pretend you're some authority in my realm.
Epidemiologist? Dermatologist?
Again you talk as if medicine was the only branch that worked with bugs, you work with bugs in controlled enviroments, other people also work with bugs, do you know how to properly sanitize a pig farm, a slaughterhouse, a meat processing facility and the delivery up to your fridge? that's IMO much harder than sanitizing a hospital where everything is more tightly controlled.
In my field i have worked with bugs, mainly soil, but in my field we work specially with statistics and risk/reward ratios, and complex systems.
Your analisys is so simple, disinfected judogi vs used judogi (dirty and clean are arbitrary) you may see a logical and simple conclusion which may or may not be true, because of practicity. But in a real uncontrolled enviroment things go awry, as you pointed out defense soap kills good bacteria so it actually increases the chance of getting a disease, this you know now, but before many "Doctors" would swear their lives upon defense soap.
That's also why i like epidemiologists, you know the guys that have to determine how diseases spread in the REAL uncontrolled enviroment. Like the guys that wrote the article i linked to.
Now we are not arguing ad hominems because i brought evidence you are not arguing what i am saying, you are arguing against
Shiraki Y, Hiruma M, Hirose N, Sugita T, Ikeda S.
Department of Dermatology, Juntendo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan. [email protected]
Who found out that once a week was the breaking point where it became statistically significant.
You could even had followed the full article i pointed out, the iranian one where they recommen DAILY washing the equipment and prove me wrong with it (although there is no evidence its on discussion of results)
How about we act civil and leave the ego at home, i mean i stopped using an ad hominem at the moment i knew i had an educated person in front, you didnt, your whole argument is ad hominen, argumentum ad ignorantia, and the good practices of food/lab/hospital.
If you want to be civil then start researching, there is a WORLD of information on sports and disease, use google scholar and bring what you want or can, if you dont, then stop being uncivil, where i train people dont mind about dogis unless they smell because we are hard pressed as it is, there are tons of full time students that are also competitors and handwash because they dont have washing machines, ever tried handwashing a thick double weave? that its not drying in a day, you can be certain of it.