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TOP TWENTY

Power lines double
risk of leukaemia

Death by chocolate

Killer bras

Cancer on the lawn

Cordless phones
also fry


Bugs drop out
of the air


Children's bones
fizzed away


Organic milk just
oozes health

Animals give GM
the thumbs down


Out of the frying pan
- Teflon 'flu


More trees no answer to
global warming


Fluoride dumbs
down children


Ultrasound
- just looking can hurt


Short mobile calls affect
children's brains
for 50 minutes

Mum's fillings - why there
are four times more
autistic boys


Pot plants hoover
up pollution


Am I a girl or a boy?

Margarine brings fourfold
risk of blindness

Leave the sunscreen at home

Elderberry knocks out 'flu

 
Bugs drop out of the air
Clive Begg and colleagues at the University of Leeds showed that air ionisers (which emit negative ions) could comprehensively disinfect hospital wards, reducing infection to zero. The staff at St. James Hospital in Leeds were astonished and so impressed that they asked the researchers to leave the equipment with them after the year-long trial was completed.

The researchers first thought that the negative ions collided with airborne bacteria and viruses, giving them a negative charge and causing them to fall out of the air. Apparently not quite. Electronics company Sharp had previously shown that both the positive and negative ions produced by their air conditioning systems inactivated viruses, including flu viruses.

See also Garlic zaps MRSA in the section on Complementary Medicine.

(9481) New Scientist