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Why You Really Shouldn't Go To Work When You're Sick - YouTube
Channel: Seeker
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I'm not feeling so good. *cough* *cough* I
guess I should go to work!
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sickos
Flu season is serious, and it's different
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every year, which is why we keep needing flu
shots. But flu shots don't stop every infection
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every time, which is why WHEN YOU'RE SICK
STAY HOME. Trust me, no one is so important
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at their job that they can get everyone sick.
"Oh, Trace, I'll just go sit at my desk, no
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one will get sick! I just won't touch them!"
WRONG.
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A study by the American Society for Microbiology
found within 2 to 4 hours of putting a little
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contaminant on a doorknob, coffee pot handle,
or tabletop, 40 to 60 percent of workers were
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infected. BOOM. One. Doorknob. They used a
virus called MS-2 which doesn't infect humans,
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but can spread in the same way as any human
pathogen; and the researchers said, quote,
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"It spread like crazy." The researchers tested
up to 100 fomites -- places where infections
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can live, like "light switches, bed rails,
table tops, countertops, push buttons, coffee
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pots handles, sink tap handles, door knobs,
phones and computer equipment" -- and found
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them everywhere, and it only took hours to
get from a tabletop onto people's skin!
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Virus contamination moves quickly and gets
on everything. This might come as a shock
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to some of you, but the word "viral" comes
from how quickly viruses can spread… just
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like an Ellen tweet from the Oscars. Hands
are everywhere, keyboards, desks and things
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all over your school or office. Plus, you
touch your face an average of every three
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minutes.
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In a natural environment -- not when an experimenter
puts it there -- viruses can survive on surfaces
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for hours, or simply travel through the air.
When a sick coworker coughs or sneezes they're
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throwing about 1.5 liters of air out of their
lungs and between 3,000 and 40,000 droplets
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of saliva tainted with pathogens. If those
droplets are small enough, less than four
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microns, they can live in the air, waiting
to be inhaled by passersby, even hours later.
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The larger droplets fall onto surfaces, where
they are picked up and moved around by human
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activity… When people touch a surface we
pick up between 30 and 50 percent of the organisms
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on that surface. You're welcome for the nightmares.
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Remember, viruses and bacteria live in the
world all the time, we're constantly coming
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in contact with them, not just around sick
people. The thing is, most are fought off
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by the immune system every day, constantly;
this is actually a good thing, because it
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keeps our defenses strong! But once a sick
person enters our midst those sneeze and surface
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droplets aren't just testing our defenses…
That person is carrying a pathogen that has
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somehow circumvented their immune responses,
so it can probably do the same to us!
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Researchers at Cornell found people who come
to work sick account for 60 percent of health
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costs for businesses. But why do people come
to work? Because people can tell when you're
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absent. Absenteeism is a serious issue for
employee productivity and thus is often studied,
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but now science is catching on to presenteeism,
or the act of working while sick. New studies
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in this area have found, you're not helping,
you're hurting! One study in Population Health
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Management found 1600 dollars are lost per
employee annually for presenteeism, and the
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Journal of Occupational and Environmental
Medicine found a 2.3 to 1 ratio of productivity
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to medical costs… it's actually cheaper
for you to stay home than to come to work!
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PLUS you're not infecting other employees
(which drives costs up further). SO STAY HOME.
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STOP COMING TO THE OFFICE. We work in a digital-friendly
age, and at digital-friendly offices people
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can often work from home, keeping their sickness
to themselves! Which is important.
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In studies of people with chronic illnesses,
researchers find it's better to take a sick
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day and be refreshed than work debilitated
without a break. Presenteeism is new, as is
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the idea that we can work from home, so researchers
are struggling to find hard and fast costs
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to support business policies; the Harvard
Business Review said "Without a standard tool
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for measurement, 'there is a lot of confusion
about what we’re even measuring.'"
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More research is needed, but in the meantime,
if you're sick, and you insist on being at
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work, keep in mind, you're spreading your
sickness around; avoid physical contact others
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and wash your hands often. If you're at work
with sick people and you're NOT sick. Make
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sure you wash your hands often too, and be
aware of common fomites: the biggest being
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handles (doors, but also the handles of microwaves,
coffee pots, fridges and sinks); also buttons
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on water fountains, vending machines, and
keyboards. It's important to clean your surfaces
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too! I mean, by the numbers, keyboards are
dirtier than toilets! But to be honest, the
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FEAR of these illnesses spreads faster even
than the disease. So don't go bubble-boy on
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us; just be aware, wash your hands, and you'll
be fine.
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Plus, you're made of viruses, so you shouldn't
be THAT afraid of them. What, you… didn't
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know that?? Julia explains how you are completely
filled with viruses here
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Do you go to work sick?! WHY?! WHY DO YOU
DO THAT? Really, tell us your motivation,
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let's break down some stereotypes. For example,
contractors don't get sick days; that's messed
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up!
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