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Mom was right about lots of things: eating your vegetables, washing your

hands and never running with scissors.

But some of her other medical advice — such as waiting an hour after eating

before swimming — just doesn't hold water, according to the authors of two

new books about health myths.

But mothers shouldn't get all the blame for dubious medical advice. Doctors

dispense plenty of it, too, says Adesman, a pediatrician at New

York's Schneider Children's Hospital and author of Babyfacts: The Truth

About Your Child's Health From Newborn Through Preschool (Wiley, $15.95).

The problem is that many important medical questions have never been

answered, at least not with rigorous clinical trials. When in doubt, doctors

often fall back on what their own mentors taught them, without questioning

the evidence on which their advice is based, say Indiana University School

of Medicine pediatricians Carroll and Vreeman.

" It's amazing how often doctors will speak with a lot of authority when

there's no evidence that they're right and, unfortunately, even when there's

some evidence to show that they're wrong, " says Carroll, co-author with

Vreeman of Don't Swallow Your Gum! Myths, Half-Truths and Outright Lies

About Your Body and Health (St. 's , $13.95). " A frighteningly

large amount of what we do is just our best guess. "

So what can patients believe? Not these medical wives' tales:

Sugar makes kids hyper. Parents insist this one is true, even though 12

studies have shown no effect between children's behavior and the sugar in

their foods.

You can prevent colds with vitamin C, echinacea or zinc. All colds

eventually go away on their own after a few days, so people can be tempted

to credit their recovery to something they did to find relief. But 16

studies show that echinacea is no better than a sugar pill. Thirty studies

including a total of 11,000 people found vitamin C had no effect. Three of

four well-done studies of zinc found no effect. But using zinc nasal gel can

destroy the sense of smell for years.

Adding cereal to a baby's diet will help him sleep longer. Parents and

pediatricians alike are perpetuating that myth, perhaps because

sleep-deprived parents are willing to believe anything that might help them

and their infants get more sleep. But studies dating to 1974 show that

babies who are fed cereal get no more sleep than other babies.

Iron in baby formula causes constipation. Studies actually have found no

difference in baby's bowel movements, whether infants received

iron-fortified food or not. But babies who get iron-fortified formula are

less likely to be anemic.

Teething causes a fever. Studies show that teething babies are no more

likely to run a fever than others.

Going out in cold or wet weather makes you sick. Colds and flus are seasonal

and tend to strike during the winter. But even when scientists put cold

viruses directly into people's noses, people who were chilled were no more

likely to become ill than those who were warm and comfortable.

You should wait an hour after eating before you go swimming. Scientists have

labeled that advice " questionable " since 1961. Exercising after eating a big

meal may make people feel uncomfortable, but it won't cause life-threatening

cramps.

You can catch poison ivy from someone who has it. The oil in poison ivy,

urushiol, is what causes the itchy rash — whether the oil comes directly

from the plant or from clothing or gardening tools on which the oil lands.

But the rash itself isn't contagious, as long as a person has since washed

off the oil.

You need to stay awake if you have a concussion. Most people with

concussions will not fall into comas if they go to sleep. If a doctor says

the concussion needs no treatment, there's no reason not to sleep.

Never wake a sleepwalker. No sleepwalker has ever died as a result of being

woken up.

You can determine the gender of your baby by timing when you have sex. Some

people try to conceive a boy by having sex in the middle of a woman's

menstrual cycle, hoping that the more mobile sperm carrying a Y chromosome

are more likely to penetrate the cervical mucus, which is thicker at this

time of the month. But an analysis of six studies found there were no more

boys conceived at this time of the month than girls.

Birth control pills don't work as well if you're on antibiotics. A review by

the American Academy of Family Physicians found common antibiotics have no

effect on the pill.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-05-25-medical-myths_N.htm?csp=usat.me

--

Ortiz, MS RD

A Healthy Body is a Terrible Thing to Waste

Save the earth. It's the only planet with chocolate

Need to lose weight - read a few of these everyday:

http://www.glasbergen.com/fit.html

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