Beware! Used underwear can give you syphilis, other STDs
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She
drives slowly, being careful of the many vehicles and the milling crowd
in the market. Suddenly, she pulls over her Sports Utility Vehicle,
alights, walks into a stall and joins other shoppers selecting
second-hand underwear from a heap.
She is lucky to find a parking space
because it is scarce on Fridays at Vesper Market, off Lagos-Badagry
Expressway in Badagry Local Government Area, Lagos. On the major market
day (Friday) finding space to either walk or park vehicles is usually a
big challenge.
That is the day shoppers converge on the
market to buy from the newest consignments of second-hand clothes from
London, United States, Italy and other countries.
Second-hand clothes? Yes, even second-hand underwear!
There, you find buyers who resell the
wares in other smaller markets. You will also find direct users – both
low and medium income earners. Wholesale transactions are done on
Fridays. On offer are all types of used clothes, shoes, bags and
underwear for men, women and children.
The woman, who later identified herself as Danny, told Saturday PUNCH
that she had a regular customer in the market. She visits the market
only when her customer informs her, via the telephone, that there are
new consignments.
“My customer has my (telephone) number
and she calls me anytime she has new items,” she told our correspondent,
adding that though she could afford new materials, the used ones were
of better quality.
“I prefer this. I can’t imagine myself
buying sub-standard new underwear. It’s frustrating because you pay more
for lesser quality,” she said.
Danny, however, does not know that using second-hand underwear can be hazardous to her health.
An undergraduate, Marylyn Okon, told
our correspondent that buying second-hand dresses and underwear gives
her the opportunity of buying quality outfits at lower prices. But she
is aware of the health implications.
“Yes, I know there are health implications but I cannot afford to buy new clothes in the regular boutiques, these ‘bend down’
boutiques give me the opportunity to wear good quality clothes in
school and I don’t have to pay much. My dressing is as good as that of
my colleagues and except I tell them, they won’t know that I bought them
from here. Second-hand clothes are a blessing to poor people like me. I
buy used dresses and underwear,” she said.
Felix Goodman sells second-hand
underwear. He does not know that the goods he handles everyday can cause
harm not only to his customers’ health, but to his own health too.
“Wives usually buy on behalf of their
husbands. We have real good things and those who know the difference
prefer them to the new ones in terms of quality. It’s a good business
and I make good profit from it. Our customers continue to increase
because people bring their friends who admire what they see on them,” he
said.
Vesper Market is fast taking the shine
off popular second-hand markets in Aswani, Yaba and Katangua, all in
Lagos. These markets are also common in Kaduna, Abuja, Warri and Benin
City among others.
The rule there is, ‘never mind who’s
staring; everyone is in the market to buy high quality materials at
cheaper rates. So, the shoppers bend down to select their choice items,
from the heaps of boxers, singlets, T-shirts, panties, brassiere,
camisoles, knickers, girdles and night gowns, among others.
However, medical studies have raised the alarm over the risk that these used items pose.
They say some bacteria, fungi, parasitic and viral infections can be contracted through wearing of second- hand clothes.
They claim Sexually Transmitted Diseases are not only contracted through sexual relationship with infected persons.
According to studies, while used clothes
generally pose health dangers to users, the underwear has been found to
present greater risks.
Infections such as virginal and skin
candidiasis, scabies, tinea corporis, chicken pox, gonorrhoea, syphilis,
and even Hepatitis A, B and C, among others, can be linked to wearing
underwear previously used by infected persons.
A consultant dermatologist, Dr.
Olufunmilayo Ajose, said the risk of infection is heightened where users
fail to wash, properly disinfect and iron these clothes.
She said though the harsh economic
realities might make it difficult to ban the sale and use of second-hand
underwear and clothes, there should be proper awareness on handling and
using them.
Ajose said, “The handling from the
source is very important. If the clothes are not properly stored but are
bundled together, they may become mouldy and fungal. If in turn the
person who buys them does not wash and iron before wearing them, he will
be at risk of picking any infection that the previous user has.
“If proper care is taken, no disease
will cling permanently to the clothes. So any second-hand clothes or
underwear that you cannot iron, don’t buy them or you risk being
infected with STIs, scabies and other fungi, bacteria and virus-linked
infections.”
But a Consultant Surgeon at the Lagos
University Teaching Hospital, Dr. Philip Ogunjimi, said people should
avoid used underwear entirely because of the health risks.
He said that some bacteria are very resistant and can survive harsh conditions for long on clothes.
He said that a regular wash may not get
rid of some of the bacteria, especially those that come with discharge
from the body of the previous user.
He added that strong reagents are
sometimes needed to get rid of them, stressing that such clothes must be
ironed so that the heat can kill the eggs, where present.
“It is true that there are great risks
in using second-hand underclothes. STIs are the most likely ones. This
practice should be discouraged in the interest of healthy living,” said
Ogunjimi.
A medical counsellor based in Delta
State, Dr. Abidemi Shabi, said there are possibilities of contracting
various kinds of infections through the wearing of second-hand clothes.
He said, “Fungi infections include Tinea
(Ring worm), viral infections include genital warts for underwear, and
parasitic infestations such as scabies and body lice, which is also
capable of causing louse-borne diseases.
“All of these infections can, however, be prevented simply by washing and ironing of the used clothes before wearing them.”
A Gynaecologist and the Medical
Director, BeeHess Hospital, Lagos, Dr. Bakare Olabode, said organisms in
pus on underwear can stay alive and can be dangerous to the health of
the next user if not properly treated.
“Anyone buying these materials should
ensure that antiseptic is used to disinfect them and the underwear
should either be lined out in the sun or ironed before wearing them.
Itching under the thighs, candidiasis and other STIs can be prevented.”
In a comment posted on the Internet, Dr.
Folusho Ajani of the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital said
second-hand clothes might also cause hepatitis.
She said the B, C, D and G types might
be transmitted through blood, sweat and semen of infected persons. She
explained that candidiasis, a STI, is caused by the yeast fungus found
on the skin.
She, however, stressed that vaginal and
skin variants could be contracted from using second-hand clothes and
underwear, previously used by an infected person.
She said the yeast fungi responsible for
the disease could be passed on to the new user if precaution is not
taken before wearing them.
She stressed the need to thoroughly wash the underwear with disinfectants and iron them before use.
She said, “Candidiasis of the skin may
also be contracted through used clothes, though it is rare except there
are cuts on the skin. Hepatitis viruses hardly survive outside the body
for a long time.”
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