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Concerned About Coronavirus? Tame Inflammation to Help Reduce the Risk

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Scramble to Track Cambodia Cruise Passengers After Coronavirus Case Reported

SIHANOUKVILLE, Cambodia—Health authorities scrambled on Feb. 17 to track hundreds of passengers who disembarked from a cruise ship in Cambodia last week after a woman tested positive for coronavirus, heightening fears about the spread of the disease around the world. The new case raises questions about how companies and countries should handle monitoring and quarantine for people who may have been exposed to the new virus, since the American woman from the Westerdam cruise ship had passed the usually presumed incubation period of 14 days. Holland America Line, which is owned by cruise giant Carnival Corp., said it is working with governments and health experts to track passengers. “Guests who have already returned home will be contacted by their local health department and be provided further information,” the company said…

Concerned About Coronavirus? Tame Inflammation to Help Reduce the Risk

Over the past few weeks, there has been growing concern about a coronavirus outbreak. Are you at high risk?

Probably not. Although a handful of North American cases have come to light in the past week, the virus is largely concentrated in Wuhan, China. Other countries in the Far East have reported cases, but that is a long way from here.

At this point, here in America, you have a far greater likelihood of catching the flu. As minor as the flu sounds, it can be very serious.

The overall strength of your immune system plays a major role in the susceptibility and severity of viral illnesses like the flu and coronavirus. So far, reports indicate that coronavirus is taking the lives of the elderly, who generally have a number of health conditions that tax the immune system.

One major influencing factor on immune health and your likelihood of contracting and fighting illness is inflammation. Low-grade, or chronic, inflammation takes up valuable resources from your immune system, resulting in less protection and functionality when an infection does hit.

The best way to reduce your chances of succumbing to a viral illness, therefore, is to focus on building a healthy immune system by limiting systemic inflammation.

Some immune-boosting practices include:

  • Getting seven-to-nine hours of sleep each night
  • Maintaining a healthy weight
  • Eating plenty of fruits and vegetables (minimum four servings per day of each)
  • Limiting intake of processed, refined, and high-sugar foods
  • Drinking adequate fluid (water, tea, coffee, etc.)
  • Getting regular exercise/activity
  • Limiting alcohol
  • Managing stress
  • Not smoking

Fruits and vegetables are extremely important for limiting inflammation and promoting immunity. They are nutritionally dense, great sources of valuable antioxidants that equip your cells to fight damage, and they also contribute to weight management.

In addition to these lifestyle factors, you may reduce your risk for flu or other bacterial and viral infections by paying attention to the following:

  • Regularly wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds.
  • If you can鈥檛 immediately wash your hands after touching high-traffic or public surfaces, use alcohol-based sanitizers.
  • Avoid touching your mouth, eyes, or nose with unclean hands.
  • Avoid close contact with sick people.

Unless you鈥檝e recently been to Wuhan, China, or have been in close quarters with someone that has, you鈥檙e at very low risk for coronavirus. If you have a compromised immune system, or other health issues, you may however want to pay more attention to the flu.

Take the above steps to limit systemic inflammation and build a healthy immune system. Doing so can greatly affect your risk and response to illness.

Devon Andre holds a bachelor鈥檚 of forensic science from the University of Windsor in Canada and a Juris Doctor from the University of Pittsburgh. Andre is a journalist for聽BelMarraHealth,聽which first published this article.

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University Tells Professors to Stop Sending Students for Coronavirus Tests Over Coughing

After receiving complaints, the University of Florida (UF) has told its faculty members that they should not exclude students who may be visibly sick from class due to fears of the new coronavirus. There has been no confirmed case of the coronavirus, called COVID-19, on the UF campus that hosts some 6,000 international students, but at least one professor reportedly asked coughing and sniffing students to leave class and be tested for the virus, reflecting anxieties about the disease’s spread amid Florida’s flu season. “We are aware that some instructors have asked students who are showing visible cold- or flu-like symptoms to leave class and return with a letter from the Student Health Care Center confirming that they do not have coronavirus,” the school’s provost, Joseph Glover, wrote to deans…