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Eating nosebleedb Can Be Good For Health



A Canadian scholar is encouraging his students to eat nosebleed. Scott Napper, a biochemist at the University of Saskatchewan who is responsible for the research, is urging his students to "nudge" their noses to investigate the possible benefits that eating mucosal can bring to health. According to him, this can boost the immune system. The information is from the Daily Mail.

Napper believes that this works by introducing small harmless amounts, including the germs that return to the body.

In the study, he divided his class into two parts. Half ingested and the other did not engage in "antisocial behavior." After that, he looked at how the immune system responds to the new habit.

In the result, he concluded that those who ingest had a stronger system. "Nature drives us to do different things and different kinds of food," explained the professor. "We have evolved under very dirty conditions and perhaps this desire to keep our environment and our sterile behaviors is not really working in our favor," he added.

Hilary Longhurst, a consultant immunologist at the Bart NHS Trust, believes that something similar occurs when people bite their nails. "Unless your hands are filthy, the impurities we encounter when biting our nails can boost our immune system," he said.