Sumner has started. Even at the early stage, it has started scorching. We have to confront the heat, itching, sweat, and fatigue for the coming 3 months! How to prevent these diseases and protect ourselves?
Here are a few useful
tips:
Prickly heat - The
normal temperature for the human body is 37 degrees Celsius. It is quite normal
for the ambient temperature to touch even 45 Degrees Celsius during summer. In
order to maintain our normal body heat level, we tend to sweat a lot. If we do
not maintain our body clean, the sweat glands will accumulate dirt and get
blocked. If we take bath twice a day, we will not get prickly heat.
Applying calamine lotion on the prickly heat will reduce itchiness.
Polyps - Unwanted
material such as salt and urea will not be released by skin affected by prickly
heat. They will stay on the skin and stay as dirt on the prickly heat. With
bacterial attack, this area gets swollen. Antibiotic drugs and ointments are
the solution for this complaint. Avoid long outings in the sun.
Fungus infection - Fungus
will enter the moist areas in our body quite easily. Particularly, it is easy
for the fungus to enter the prickly heat areas. With this, itching will get
more intense and the skin will get rough in the arras. Ointments and powders
reducing rash can be applied. It is very important to keep our underclothes
clean – this can alone prevent fungus infection.
Difficulty in urination - This
is common in summemer. Excessive sweating and failure to drink sufficient
quantity of water are the reasons. The quantity of urine also will be reduced.
The salts that are passed along with urine tend to solidify and get
crystallized on the urinal path. This creates the difficulty to pass urine.
Drinking sufficient quantity of water is the only cure.
Infectious diseases - cooked
food items tend to go bad during severe summer. Disease making Germs and
bacteria settle on these and multiply quickly. Eating this food will lead to
vomit. Diarrheas, Cholera, typhoid and jaundice. So, it is better to eat the
food items prepared during summer immediately. Do not allow flies and
mosquitoes to fly * sit over these items. Water should be boiled and cooled
before usage.
Fatigue due to heat - During
the period as sever summer, body heat tends to rise to 106 Degrees Fahrenheit.
The body tends to sag and gets tired. There will be severe thirst. Headache,
vomiting, dizziness, and giddiness may appear. Severe heat during summer ends
to remove some essentials salts in the body leading to the above complaints.
Sunstroke - We
might have watched people working or walking on the road (during summer) to
collapse and faint. This is due to sunstroke. Under severe summer, the blood
vessels in the body expand and make way for the blood to get stagnated in the
parts below the waist. This affects the blood flow to the heart and reduces the
blood pressure. The brain fails to get sufficient blood. This leads to
fainting.
First Aid for sunstroke - Take
the affected person to a cooler area. Make him lie down under the fan. Loosen
the clothes and ensure that cool air touches all parts of the body. Do not use
any pillows for head-rest. Keep the feet a little above. Give a sponge bath
with wet cloth. More importantly, arrange saline water and glucose drips for
the affected person. Take him/her to the doctor immediately.
Water - Humidity
tend to be very high in cities like Chennai. The sweat released by the human
does not evaporate immediately. So, the body temperature will not drop.
However, sweating will continue. Elements such as Potassium and sodium get
released causing excessive water removal.. The body tires. To avoid this, drink
some water every hour. Even when staying in an air-conditioned facility or even
when not feeling so thirsty, still it is important to take 3 to 5 litres of
water every day during summer.
Avoid aerated cool
drinks!!! - Reduce taking coffee and tea during summer. Also, avoid
aerated cool drinks. Taking excessive cold drinks contracts the blood veins and
increases the heat.
Instead of cold drinks, it is better to take sherbets, tender coconut, jiggery water, etc. These drinks contain Sodium and Potassium which absorb the excess heat in the body and condition its temperature. These counter the excess loss of water and prevent the related diseases. Taking lemon juice with salt or sugugar is a cheap but very effective step.
Eat more fruits - Watermelon,
cucumber, guava, papaya, orange, grapes, pineapple, jackfruit, and melon can be
taken more often. These are rich in Potassium. This will offset the Potassium
which tends to get released with the sweat during summer. Fruits are the best
to avoid fatigue caused by heat.
Avoid oil!! - Avoid
food items deep fried in oil. Also, avoid excessive sweet items such as creamy
cakes, and bakery items, Burger, pizza, and ice cream as they induce thirst.
Again, avoid hot and spicy items with masala.
Best Summer foods - Idlis,
Idiyappams, Curd rice, buttermilk rice, millet porridge, greens, carrot,
beetroot, okra (lady’s finger), radish, bitter gourd, snake gourd, flat beans,
cabbage, banana stems, onion (with curd), and tomato are some of the best
summer food items.
During the evenings, it
is better to take cucumber salad, watermelon juice or soup, tomato soup, and
vegetable soup. Taking millet porridge mixed in curd reduces the body heat
quickly. Both millet and curd have the property to absorb the body heat.
Avoid moving out for long
periods in the sun - Avoid being out in the sun for not more than a period of 2
hours. Avoid outings between 12 Noon and 4 PM. If the outing is must,
take an umbrella. Please move in the shadowy zones. Elders and very young
children can especially avoid exposure in the sun. It is inviting trouble! If
travelling in the sun for along period, use sun-glasses!
Keep care on your dress - Cotton
is the best for summer. Avoid tight fitting dresses and use the slightly loose
ones. Dark colored cloths absorb heat and so better to avoid them. Also, avoid
cloths of synthetic fibers. White is most suitable. Hose allergic to sunlight
can apply sunscreen lotions or ointments before moving out.