I'm a new poster but I've been enjoying the list for a few months now. I just received this message in my mailbox and I thought of this group while thinking of who I need to send it to. I've been cleaning the lids of my cans for years since a friend's mother was such a fanatic about it. Pleas read this and be advised.
A stock clerk was sent to clean up a storeroom in Maui, Hawaii. When he got back, he was complaining that the storeroom was really filthy and that he noticed dried mouse or rat droppings in some areas. A couple of days later, he started to feel like he was doming down with a stomach flu, complained of sore joints and headaches, and began to vomit. He went to bed and never really got up again. Within two days he was severely ill and weak. His blood sugar count was down to 66 and his face and eyeballs were yellow. He was rushed to the emergency room, where he was diagnosed to be suffering from massive organ failure. He died shortly before midnight. No one would have made the connection between his job and his death, had it not been for a doctor who specifically asked if he had been in a wearhouse or exposed to dried rat or mouse droppings at any time. They said there is a virus (much like the Hanta virus) that lives in dried rat droppings. Once dried, these droppings are like dust and can be easily breathed in or injested if a person does not wear protective gear or fails to wash face and hands thoroughly.
An autopsy was preformed on the clerk to verify the doctor's suspicions.
This is why it is extremely important to ALWAYS carefully rinse off the tops of canned sodas or foods, and to wipe off pasta packaging, cereal boxes, and so on.
Almost everything you buy in a supermarket was stored in a warehouse at one time or another, and stores themselves often have rodents. Most of us remember to wash vegetables and fruits but never think of boxes and cans.
The ugly truth is, even the most modern, upper-class, super store has rats and mice. And their warehouse most assuredly does! Whenever you buy any canned soft drink, please make sure that you wash the top with running water and soap or, it that is not available, drink with a straw.
The investigation of soda cans by the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta, discovered that the tops of soda cans can be lethal. Canned drinks and other foodstuffs are stored in warehouses and containers that are usually infested with rodents, and then they get transported to retail outlets without being properly cleaned.