❌ Microplastics are “one of the greatest manmade disasters of our time”, according to the Natural History Museum.

That’s bad news, given they are also everywhere; in tap water, the food you buy, the clothes you wear and the air you breathe

Thread 🧵
telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness…
👁️ The largest microplastics can be seen by the naked eye, but many of them are small enough to act like specks of dust which we can inadvertently breathe in or eat in food.

The smallest particles are called nanoplastics - they can make their way deep into the human body
🔬New findings from the University of Portsmouth found that that we might be breathing in up to 7,000 microplastic particles a day
telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness…
🏡Using specialist equipment, they measured a typical family home and found the highest concentration of it was in the bedroom of the family’s eight-year-old daughter, whose room was decorated with plastic-based bedding, carpet and soft toys
❌Although research is in its infancy, the risks of these plastics could be serious – some studies have linked high exposure to cancer risk and disrupting our hormones.

In animal studies, the particles have been shown to affect metabolism, gut bacteria and the immune system
It is not yet known what a healthy level of microplastics might look like, but Dr Sabine Donnai, CEO of the Viavi clinic, is adamant that many people in the West are over the threshold
So, how do we stop microplastics getting into our bodies?

♻️Dr Donnai is sure that everyone can reduce their exposure with a few easy tweaks
Dr Donnai's recommendations include:

1⃣ Avoiding reheating takeaway food in plastic boxes
2⃣ Using a glass water bottle instead of a plastic one
3⃣ Avoiding using cling film on hot food
4⃣ Using metal or glass coffee cups
♻️Read our guide to reducing your microplastic intake here ⬇️
telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness…

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More from @Telegraph

9 Nov
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Here's why going to sleep during the ‘golden hour’ could save your life

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👑 Last week, the most famous revenge dress of all time was recreated on the set of The Crown.

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📅 The scene harks back to the evening of June 29 1994, when Prince Charles publicly confessed his affair with Camilla Parker-Bowles for the first time in a television interview with Jonathan Dimbleby Image
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9 Nov
🔴 The Telegraph can reveal the 5 NHS England trusts where patients who died with Covid were most likely to have caught the disease at hospital.

Search your postcode to see the number of hospital acquired infections in your nearby NHS England trusts 👇
telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/11/0…
The Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust topped the list, after 213 patients who had been admitted for other illnesses “probably” or “definitely” caught Covid on its wards, accounting for a third of all the trust’s Covid deaths Image
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telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/11/0…
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9 Nov
💉Almost a year since the UK became the first country in the world to approve a clinically-tested Covid jab, cracks are starting to show.

A complex patchwork of vaccine rules have created no end of confusion

Thread 🧵👇
telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness…
Currently, teens in the UK aged 12 to 17 are eligible for a jab – but healthy teenagers can only receive one dose.

➡️Countries like Canada and Germany require children over 12 to be double-jabbed to avoid quarantine
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Tanja Hoffman, a Canadian who lives in the UK, planned to fly home this Christmas to visit her 80-year-old mother and 83-year-old mother-in-law.

Now, those plans are on hold
telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness… Image
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9 Nov
🔴Poland has sealed part of its border with Belarus.

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🇧🇾Belarus has responded by warning Poland against escalating tensions on the border, saying Warsaw's treatment of migrants would be a "litmus test" of its commitment to international norms
telegraph.co.uk/world-news/202… Image
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telegraph.co.uk/world-news/202…
Read 4 tweets
8 Nov
👨‍🦲 Are we witnessing a new dawn for baldness treatments?

Scientists have been testing new methods of hair transplantation, which could be more efficient and less invasive than current procedures

Thread 🧵👇
telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness…
📈Hair transplants are more in demand than ever

“With all the lockdowns, some people have saved a lot of money, and they’re now spending it on the most valuable asset they have – themselves,” says Coen Gho
telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness…
But this surge in demand for hair loss treatments is also fostering new ideas.

⚡️Gho has developed a reputation as a leading innovator within the hair transplantation world, through pioneering a technique called partial longitudinal follicular unit extraction
Read 9 tweets

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