With the onset of winter, the weather has become dry and cold, which is particularly important for typhoid patients. Bathing, as an integral part of everyday life, requires more attention in the winter to the details in order to avoid skin irritation and aggravating conditions. The following are some of the recommendations for the winter bathing of typhoid patients.
Water temperature appropriate
When bathing in winter, water should not be too hot and warm. Excessive water temperatures stimulate the skin, cause white spots to spread, and can burn the skin, causing itching and red and edible symptoms. Therefore, it is important for typhoon patients to keep their water temperature under control during the winter bath and to avoid overheated water.
2. Selection of moderate ablutions
Avoiding the use of irritated soap, bathing, etc., these products can cause skin irritation and increase the disease. It is recommended that moderate, non-irritating bathing products, such as amino acids, soap- and non-sap-based blends, be selected, that are less skin irritating and that are effective in cleaning and do not disrupt skin barriers. In addition, the option may be to add bathing products with a relaxing component such as oats extraction.
3 Sweat
When bathing, do not push the skin so as not to damage the skin, resulting in increased white spots. The skin of a white phoenix patient is sensitive and fragile, and strong rinsing may result in impairment of the skin barrier function, leading to skin discomforts such as drying and itching. Therefore, the bath should be softly polished to avoid excessive friction.
4. Wetting.
After the bath is completed, the moist cream is applied in time to keep the skin wet and to prevent the skin from drying. Patients with white phoenix are prone to drier, rinsing and other symptoms, and it is therefore important to keep wet. Vacant emulsions containing components such as vitamin E, glycerine, which help to lock the moisture and keep the skin humid, can be selected and applied evenly to the body after bathing.
5. Avoid frequent bathing
Excessive bathing causes the skin to dry and it is recommended that the frequency of bathing be properly controlled. In winter, the skin itself is easily dry, and if baths are too frequent, they exacerbate the symptoms of skin drying and are not conducive to recovery. As a result, the number of showers should be appropriately reduced during the winter of typhoid patients.
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