home The most in the world 10 dirtiest and most unpleasant jobs in the world

10 of the dirtiest and most unpleasant jobs in the world

Someone is sitting in the office and looking longingly out the window, dreaming of an early end to the working day. Someone works in heavy and hazardous production, while someone else is on duty at the hospital today. But it is not for nothing that it is said that everything is cognized in comparison. Now we will tell you about the most unpleasant professionsand you will realize that you have the best job in the world compared to them!

10. Vacuum cleaner

b5qhze5zWhether we like it or not, we have to regularly empty our bowels. And this means that someone just as regularly has to pump out of stationary storage facilities and dispose of "night gold" (as was previously jokingly called sewage). Foul-smelling work in the truest sense of the word.

9. Urine collector

bpwmb2ptIf you've ever watched Jurassic Park III, you probably shivered slightly as you watched young Eric collect T-Rex's urine. Slightly, because deep down you knew that it was just a movie and, therefore, its events are completely fictional.

Nevertheless, the urine collector is a real, albeit very unpleasant profession, and there are many of its specializations. For example, orangutan urine collectors place large plastic sheets or attach plastic bags to trees in the hope of collecting adequate urine samples from monkeys to study the factors that influence their reproduction. On the other hand, people collecting deer urine are tasked with selling Bambi urine to hunters, who then use the scent to attract other deer.

8. Technique of artificial insemination of farm animals

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If you love animals, you can become, for example, a veterinarian, zoo worker, or even a marine animal trainer. The last job that comes to mind is a job that requires all sorts of "love" with farm animals. Simply put, you will spend your day collecting semen from bulls or artificially inseminating cows, sheep, goats, etc. But someone has to artificially fertilize even elephants!

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Not the most pleasant job in the world, but very necessary for animal husbandry.

7. Vomit cleaner

qvk3kjbeRoller coasters are among scariest rides in the world... They are not only breathtaking, but also make your stomach shiver. And stories of people getting sick after (and sometimes during) a rollercoaster ride are not uncommon.

A reasonable question arises: who removes all this vomit? The answer is the people who do what is arguably the most vile work in the world. And they don't have to chill out during working hours. In 2008 alone, at Thorpe Park, England, a vomit cleaner collected approximately 150 liters of ejaculated stomach contents from visitors.

6. Medical waste disposal worker

kpw3oj4yHave you ever wondered what happens to medical waste, including used dressings, needles, expired drugs, amputated limbs, and human tissue and organs? In accordance with the legislation of most European countries,they must be properly disposed of (eg by incineration) to prevent harm to the environment and human health.

In Russia, biomaterials are stored in special landfills or burned in a special oven - a microcrematorium. The smell of bio-waste is described as a combination of burning rubber, bad body odor and smelly feet.

5. Forensic entomologist

s54ed3riThere are many options available to those who wish to work with dead people (perhaps because they cannot complain about the quality of the work). Coroners and funeral directors are the obvious choices. However, one option that you might not even have thought of is a forensic entomologist, a job that requires a strong stomach and, dare we say, love for insects.

Forensic entomologists are scientists who study the life cycles of insects and arthropods found on corpses during investigations. This helps determine how long ago a person died.

4. Crime scene cleaner

cmypt3flWe often see detectives and FBI agents on television shows such as C.S.I. Crime Scene "and" Criminal Minds "visit blood-stained crime scenes to solve murders. But what we rarely see is what happens to crime scenes afterwards.

It is unlikely that most viewers are wondering who is cleaning the crime scenes. If you have this question, then the answer is the crime scene cleaners. Their gruesome and sickening work entails the elimination of blood, body fluids, and other potentially infectious materials, usually from places where violent crimes have been committed. These specialists also deal with cleaning after accidents, suicides, and deaths of lonely people, about whose departure to another world, those around them recognize by the disgusting smell of decomposition from the apartment.

3. Deodorant tester

l5a0yjhmWho do you think determines how effective a particular deodorant is in combating sweat odor? Only a human nose can do this hard and, we will not be afraid of this word, stinking work. Deodorant testers have to sniff volunteers' armpits - an important part of a quality control procedure for deodorant. And so day after day.

2. Cleaners of dead animals

yzzjiiunThe technical progress of mankind is costly for our smaller brothers. Hardly anyone has counted how many animals are hit by cars or other vehicles every day.

However, their corpses do not remain lying on the road, they are promptly picked up. In Russia, this is done either by organizations specializing in the removal of dead animal corpses, or by employees of the contractor service responsible for the maintenance of a specific section of the road. And in other countries there is such a profession as cleaning roads from the corpses of downed animals.

In some American states (such as Pennsylvania, Idaho, and Montana), people are allowed to eat meat from downed animals such as deer and moose. There are even cookbooks with recipes for how to properly cook the meat of animals found on the road or its side.

1. Sewer cleaners

biamzcdzThis is not only one of the nastiest, dirtiest and most unpleasant jobs in the world, but also one of the most dangerous. More than 100 sewer workers die each year in India from accidents, suffocation or exposure to toxic gases. Unions argue that this is because workers are not given any safety equipment to get their jobs done.

Sewer cleaners must crawl chest-deep into sewers filled with human excrement (and sometimes still dead dogs and rats) and use metal scrapers, brooms, and even bare hands to clean drain and sanitary lines. And all for a measly £ 3.50 (259 rubles) per day!

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