Love to go shopping, love to try on clothes and shoes, this is the unique quality of a certain type of beauty-loving women. They are satisfied with the fresh and bright appearance of new clothes and new shoes flashing by on themselves, and usually pull good sisters or willing-to-suffer boyfriends together. Clothes are still better, but children, be careful when trying on shoes. Experts from the First Clinical College of Bethune University of Medicine remind that trying on shoes may cause athlete's foot.
Athlete's foot is an extremely common fungal infectious skin disease. 70-80% of adults have athlete's foot, just varying in severity. It tends to worsen in summer and lessen in winter, while some people suffer all year round without recovery.
Experts in dermatology from the First Clinical College of Bethune University of Medicine remind that shoes in shoe stores are often taken out for people to try on, which can easily cause cross-infection. If the previous customer has athlete's foot and tries on the shoes without buying them, the next customer may easily get infected with the athlete's foot fungus left in the shoes by the previous person, thus contracting athlete's foot.
Moreover, many shoes on the market are prone to rub feet, have too narrow toe boxes, and too hard soles. These shoes do not help walking; instead, they are more like shackles for the feet. Experts from 120 Health Network indicate that many women's shoes are designed to be slim and high to look delicate when worn, but this is actually the greatest harm to the feet. Wearing the wrong shoes, it's easy to accidentally contract athlete's foot, and for those who do, it's truly unbearable.