A doctor has stressed you should always wash your hands before eating, or food preparation(Image: Getty Images / The Image Bank RF)

List of 'important health tips' with changes which can help you live longer

by · NottinghamshireLive

Doctors have shared a list of 'quick and simple' lifestyle changes that could potentially increase your lifespan. The advice came flooding in on a viral Reddit thread, where medical professionals voiced their exasperation at the public neglecting easy yet vital health tips.

Answering a Redditor's query: "Doctors and nurses of Reddit: What is an important health tip that nobody follows? " one health worker stressed the significance of cleanliness: "It isn't enough to just wash your hands after toileting."

They recommended, "You should wash your hands before eating, or food preparation. You should wash your hands when you come home, from anywhere. Wash hands before touching a baby. Also, after doing housework, or yard work. The more washing, the better."

In support, another professional advised: "Wash your hands before messing with your contacts and replace your contact case/lenses. I'm a medicine doctor – not optometrist, not ophthalmologist, but I've still seen my fair share of terrible eyeball infections from poor contact hygiene."

Meanwhile, a third contributor underscored the wide-ranging effects of oral hygiene, recounting: "Brushing your teeth affects way more than you know. After a heart surgery my uncle was told by the surgeon to keep his teeth clean.", reports the Express.

A medical professional emphasised the importance of thorough oral care, stating: "Brushing your teeth is only half the job. Flossing removes food particles that are stuck between tooth and your gum. If left too long they break down and become acidic, slowly eroding away at your enamel."

They also provided a tip for after vomiting: "Mouth washing after vomiting will exacerbate the damage to your teeth from the stomach acids. Rinse your mouth with warm water and bi-card soda to prevent any further damage."

They said: "Too many to count, but here's my greatest hits list from the ER:

  1. Exercise will improve your health. Doesn't matter how much you do, as long as it is more than zero even 20 minutes of walking will make you feel better long term than doing nothing.
  2. Follow up with your doctors: If I tell you to go see someone, you need to do that. The reason your condition gets worse is because you don't know really anything about it, so you can't tell when you need intervention or not. That's what your doctors are for, and that's why I tell you to see them even if you feel fine now.
  3. The second I hear you say "this has been going on for X months/years" you drop several places in how seriously I take your complaint, and how high I will prioritize your case. If you have had the same issue for months, it is almost certainly not critical, not something I will be able to diagnose in the ER, and definitely not something I can fix in a couple hours. The ER is not for diagnoses. It is there so that if you are about to die....you don't. And if it has been going on that long, I don't care how busy your PCP is they definitely could have seen you already. You just never tried.
  4. Take your medicine if it is prescribed to you. I can't count the number of people I see that have a known issue, have some other thing that pops up, and when I ask if they are taking their medications they say "Well I didn't think I needed them so I stopped". I don't care if you felt fine, if your blood pressure is 200/110 you can go from "fine" to "haemorrhaging into my brain" in a second.
  5. "My biggest one, and I can't believe I even have to say this anymore: Don't smoke. Just don't do it. There are absolutely zero reasons to do it, and even fewer to start if you aren't smoking already. It's unbelievable to me that this is still an issue."