- Reaction score
- 7,329
- Points
- 1,360
Short answer? No.
This from Stars & Stripes:
U.S. and Canadian information on the issue attached.
This from Stars & Stripes:
.... There are a couple places on base where the air is particularly hazardous, choked with “moon dust,” very fine dust found in Iraq and Afghanistan, or smoke from the trash-burning pit, Wright said in an e-mail. To cut down on the air pollution, an incinerator is being built to take care of the trash.
But inhaling a candy bar-sized lump of human waste? Is that even possible?
To find out, The Doctor turned to Dr. Mark Nicolls, associate professor of pulmonary and critical care medicine at Stanford School of Medicine.
“Interesting question,” he said in an e-mail. “I have not heard of this before. The answer is, I think, is that it would be highly unlikely for a candy-bar-sized lump (a la ‘Caddyshack’?) of fecal matter to accumulate in someone’s lung after breathing in organic matter that may contain fecal matter.”
The rumor supposedly comes from a study into airborne fecal matter at Kandahar Air Field conducted by one of the countries providing troops in Afghanistan, such as Australia. But NATO has no record of any country conducting such a study, Webster said.
“Short answer — that rumor is a bunch of crap,” he said, obviously not realizing that making jokes about sewage is The Doctor’s job
THE RUMOR DOCTOR’S DIAGNOSIS: This rumor is false, but there’s no doubt that the “Poo Pond” reeks worse than anything, with the possible exception of North Jersey.
U.S. and Canadian information on the issue attached.
