• TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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    5 days ago

    If you get nosebleeds often, especially in cold weather, get some ‘nasal spray’ I don’t know the exact name but mine is from Dollar General and says “Nasal Spray oxymetazoline HCL 0.05%” on the bottle.
    It’ll stop it in like 5 minutes instead of 30. With the only drawback being that I now have a slightly bloody bottle in my purse 😅

    Also they sell little cotton tubes that you can put up your nose and those work pretty well also.

    • Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      If you get nosebleeds often, go to the dr. They can fix it. Had mine fixed as a teen, went from weekly to never.

      • smeg@feddit.uk
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        5 days ago

        I’d add to this that 30 minute nosebleeds don’t sound that healthy either!

      • Plagiatus@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        *There is a good chance they can fix it.

        A friend of mine wanted to get their nose fixed but the doctors said that their nose wasn’t suitable for the procedure and that it would most likely make it worse instead of better. They mostly grew out of it naturally though, going from multiple times a day as a teen to less than once per month as an adult.

      • TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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        5 days ago

        Mine are about once a month or two. I live in Florida so the air is humid and warm, my issue isn’t with the frequency but rather that they won’t stop. I’m on a medicine that has a side effect of thinning blood, I looked into getting it fixed and decided wasn’t big enough of a deal to actually do.
        Glad it worked for you though!

    • Be careful of the oxymetazoline sprays. If used for longer periods of time (more than three days) they can get you addicted to them. This is mostly true for people using them for stuffy noses, but getting used to using them is what puts people at risk. It’s an addiction that’s actually quite common but not very often talked about, because it’s often not recognised as an addiction.

      Great, affordable medicine for the occasional nose issue, but it comes with risks people tend to ignore until it’s too late and you’re buying bags of the stuff just to get through the week.

    • BigFig@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Rather die before I bought medicine from a dollar general. Can’t trust that shit

        • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          5 days ago

          It’s legally the same chemical, and often the same brand. However, their handling of potentially sensitive products is profoundly lacking. See: https://apnews.com/article/dollar-tree-lead-cinnamon-applesauce-wanabana-7376af3115d7fe506ad2cb168787d1d3

          I wouldn’t trust them to properly comply with a recall that I as a consumer would usually trust the store to handle, like taking products they know to be contaminated off the shelf. Additionally, I wouldn’t trust them to ship or store those products in compliance with manufacturers guidelines.
          Most things will be fine, but some things breakdown or develop issues if not stored in what are typically reasonable conditions.
          For example, if kept too long or in improper conditions, aspirin can break down significantly and provide less benefit. Annoying if you’re taking it for a headache, potentially dangerous if you’re taking it for clot prevention.
          Likewise bottled water, although typically drawn from municipal water supplies, is not held to the same standards and can develop bacterial growth if left in poor conditions too long.

          Then there’s the chronic staffing issues that can lead to food that requires refrigeration, like meat or dairy, to sit waiting to be put in the cooler for far, far longer than is safe.

          Dollar stores are great for stuff like “I lost my shirt at the beach and I need something so I can go inside a restaurant”, crayons, and general “stuff” you need only a small amount of and can afford the relative markup or only need infrequently. I wouldn’t trust them for anything that goes inside a living creature because I have no confidence they even have enough staff to try to handle things appropriately.