antimicrobial 14
Guest Blog: Scientists Discover That Antimicrobial Wipes and Soaps May Be Making You (and Society) Sick
july 2011 by Vaguery
"It turns out that although we know that washing our hands prevents a range of illnesses and are incredibly eager to buy products marketed to kill germs, we don't actually take the simpler measure of washing hands in the first place. A study of nearly eight thousand individuals in five U.S. cities found almost half of the participants failed to wash their hands after going to the bathroom. In this light, no mystery salve is necessary, no miracle cure, special wipe, or magic. We need to wash our hands, because soap does the body good, at least in all the ways studied so far. It is not fancy. It is not expensive or heavily marketed and yet it works, as it long has, even though as of yet, no one can conclusively, unambiguously, tell you why."
public-health
epidemiology
marketing
antimicrobial
folk-science
july 2011 by Vaguery
CIDRAP >> IDSA calls for broad attack on antimicrobial resistance
april 2011 by jstone12
IDSA calls for attack on #antimicrobial #resistance or it's back to pre-antibiotic era
antimicrobial
resistance
from twitter
april 2011 by jstone12
Welcome To Biosynthesis - Customer Support
august 2009 by scheeko
CAM - KWKLFKKIGAVLKVL-NH2
lab
peptides
antimicrobial
august 2009 by scheeko
[Propolis' antimicrobial activity: what's new?] [Infez Med. 2007] - PubMed Result
november 2008 by vielmetti
Propolis is characterized by multifactorial activities, but only some of them have been substantiated by clinical and experimental evidence. It is widely acknowledged to exert antimicrobial activity against a wide range of microorganisms (bacteria, fungi and viruses), but also exerts antiinflammatory, anaesthetic, healing, vasoprotective, antioxidant, antitumoral, antiulcer and hepatoprotective activities. The wide spectrum of activities has led in recent years to the development of new technologies to improve propolis properties of the traditional hydroalcoholic extract. This paper reviews the antimicrobial properties of propolis, focusing on respiratory pathogens. These characteristics make propolis a valid option for therapy of upper respiratory tract infections.
propolis
bees
antimicrobial
pubmed
november 2008 by vielmetti
Antimicrobial Treatments on HVAC Air Filters
january 2008 by lridolfi
Antimicrobial air filters have only marginal success in destroying airborne microorganisms
antimicrobial
airfilters
january 2008 by lridolfi
ASHRAE Study Shows Mixed Results for Antimicrobial Filters - IEC November 1999
january 2008 by lridolfi
Antimicrobial Air Filters
antimicrobial
airfilters
january 2008 by lridolfi
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