


Holiday myths: From raw dough and booze to the ‘yuck factor’
Here’s what science says about some of them:
Poinsettias belong to the same botanical family as rubber plants that produce latex, so some skin rashes occur in people allergic to latex.
According to a Western Journal of Emergency Medicine research review, the plants’ toxic reputation “stems from a single unconfirmed death of a 2-year-old in Hawaii in 1919.”
Dr. Rachel Vreeman, an Indiana University pediatrician who has researched holiday myths, cited a study on more than 20,000 poison control center reports involving contact with poinsettias.
“In none of those cases were there deaths or serious injury. In fact, more than 95 percent of them required zero medical care,” she said.
The anglicized name comes from Joel Poinsett, a 19th-century U.S. diplomat who brought the plant back from Mexico.
Holiday blues are a real thing for many people grieving loss or absence of a loved one, and wintertime can trigger true but transient depression in some people, a condition sometimes called seasonal affective disorder. It’s linked with lack of sunlight in winter and some scientists think affected people overproduce the sleep-regulating hormone melatonin. Research suggests it affects about 6 percent of the U.S. population and rates are higher in Scandinavia. But contrary to popular belief, suicides peak in springtime, not winter.
Here’s what George Koob, director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, has to say about that: “You are in a sense self-medicating a mild withdrawal syndrome by drinking more. The problem is that’s going to wear off and you’re going to have an even worse hangover.”
Alcohol is dehydrating so replenishing with lots of water or other non-alcoholic drinks can help relieve the symptoms. But experts emphasize that prevention is the healthiest cure.
“It all boils down to: Don’t drink too much,” Koob says.
So what about that saying, “hair of the dog?” According to an old folk remedy, a dog bite could be cured by putting the animal’s hair in the wound.
A study published last month in the New England Journal of Medicine details a 2016 E. coli outbreak that hit dozens of people in 24 states that was linked with flour. Some patients had eaten or handled raw dough made with flour contaminated with that bacteria. Authorities recalled 10 million pounds of flour, some of which had been sold to restaurants that allow children to play with raw dough while waiting for their meals. Baking generally kills any bacteria.
A headline on a Food and Drug Administration consumer update sums up the agency’s advice: “Raw dough’s a raw deal.”
So is catching snowflakes on your tongue a bad idea?
“There’s a yuck factor,” Christner said. “It’s better than yellow snow.”
But the study authors found the average was a little less than 1 pound. Other studies have found it’s closer to 2 pounds.
An extra piece of pie or one holiday feast won’t doom you, Vreeman says. The problem is that the extra pound or two at holiday time becomes a pattern year after year. It adds up.