Filth is filth. Dog crap and bird crap contaminate beaches. Rolling in sand can lead to health issues. So take that walk along our beautiful beaches. And go swimming. But don’t bury your body in the sand! See the following article:
“Children and adults who build castles and dig in the sand at the beach are at greater risk of developing gastrointestinal diseases and diarrhea than people who only walk on the shore or swim in the surf, according to researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Environmental Protection Agency.
People who playfully bury their bodies in the sand are at even greater risk, according to the study published online recently in the American Journal of Epidemiology. It also shows children, who are more likely than adults to play with and possibly get sand in their mouths, stand the greatest chance of becoming ill after a day at the beach.
“Beach sand can contain indicators of fecal contamination, but we havenâ€
The study is based on interviews with more than 27,000 people who visited seven freshwater and marine beaches in the agencyâ€
“We have known for some time that swimming in waters polluted by fecal contamination can result in illness, but few previous studies have focused on sand,†said Tim Wade, Ph.D., an EPA epidemiologist and the studyâ€
People were asked about their contact with sand on the day they visited the beach (digging in the sand or whether they were buried in it). Then, 10 to 12 days later, participants were telephoned and asked questions about any health symptoms they had experienced since the visit.
Researchers found evidence of gastrointestinal illnesses, upper respiratory illnesses, rash, eye ailments, earache and infected cuts. Diarrhea and other gastrointestinal illnesses were more common in about 13 percent of people who reported digging in sand, and in about 23 percent of those who reported being buried in sand.
“A lot of people spend time at the beach, especially in the summer,†Heaney said. “And while we found that only a small percentage of people who played at the beach became ill later – less than 10 percent in any age group, for any amount of exposure – itâ€