Like, I travel around for work and I’ve met plenty of people from all backgrounds.

Why is there a demographic of people who don’t seemingly bathe regularly, or at the very least wear something to cover up their BO? I could understand if it’s an allergy, or even religious reasons (though the people I’ve met that smell bad are usually you’re average American young adult man) but recently (like in the past week, recently) I’ve met a concerning number of people who don’t seem to wear any kind of deodorant or possibly don’t even bathe regularly; it’s starting to become an issue for me, as I don’t even want to interact with them when I can smell them walking up from 3+ feet away yet I need to for work.

Does anyone have any possible insight?

      • nohamsandwich@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        The study referenced found that deodorants encourage anaerobic bacterial growth (i.e. Staphylococcus) while antiperspirants kill off most bacteria. Bacteria cultures of people who do not use armpit products are dominated by aerobic bacteria (i.e. Corynebacterium).

        • vzq@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          9 months ago

          But the problem is, Corynebacterium colonies stink. They smell heavily of the smell we associate with body odor.

          The article you linked even says so.

          My issue is not whether people that don’t use deodorant have bacterium 1 or bacterium 2. It’s that they stink.

          If you don’t use deodorant, you have smelly armpit bacteria.

          • nohamsandwich@lemmy.ml
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            9 months ago

            There are different kinds of bad smells. The smell of sweat is not that of rancid undigested meat which is what Staphylococcus smells like. If you want to be walking around like a half-digested steak, you’re welcome to it.

            • vzq@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              9 months ago

              That’s a wild exaggeration. And runs directly contrary to what is written in the article you proffered as evidence.

              You are spreading pseudo scientific disinformation.

              • nohamsandwich@lemmy.ml
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                9 months ago

                Corynebacterium is more of a fruity, vinegar smell. I don’t find that to be an offensive odor. It’s what fresh sweat smells like. Staphylococcus smells like decomposition which I find highly offensive. Try it out for yourself, rinse your armpits with iodine and see how the smell changes. If you haven’t done it then you won’t know.

                • vzq@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                  9 months ago

                  I’m totally willing to concede the point that you don’t think you smell bad.

                  But that is exactly why the OP started this thread isn’t it?

                  • nohamsandwich@lemmy.ml
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                    9 months ago

                    If you wear deodorant then you smell more like rotting flesh. That’s not my opinion, that’s science.