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Tissues!

(40 Posts)
MargotLedbetter Sat 09-Jul-22 01:04:06

Sorry if this is the wrong place to ask this: couldn't think where else.

My DH has a health condition which means that he gets through loads of tissues. He prefers Kleenex, but as he gets through two or three boxes a week the cost mounts up. We've tried Sainsbury's own brand but they aren't strong enough. Who Gives a Crap tissues are too small. Does anyone have any recommendations? We don't need anything fancy —no balsams or extra-softness — but they have to be tough enough so that you don't blow a hole in them when you sneeze!

toscalily Sun 10-Jul-22 11:17:09

I also use Lidl but has to be 3ply, they were 89p when I stocked up a while ago but my local Lidl has been out of stock for ages now so I have been buying from Aldi. Lidl also do the smaller pocket packs which are really good, come as a multipack, thicker than normal and I always have a pack or two in the car, handbag, pocket. I find Kleenex too expensive now.

V3ra Sun 10-Jul-22 11:25:42

I use Plenty kitchen roll as paper towels for my minded children, they're strong when wet as the adverts say!
I buy a pack of 8 rolls x 100 sheets from Tesco. They've gone up recently to £11 so I don't know how that compares with other options.

Chestnut Sun 10-Jul-22 11:35:46

If I were in your situation I would try and find something reusable rather than throwing out all those tissues. If you Google reusable tissues there are loads of them and you can take your pick!

Purplepixie Sun 10-Jul-22 11:37:21

Cheaply toilet rolls do the job in our house.

riete Sun 10-Jul-22 12:02:53

hi MargotLedbetter,

i know your problem only too well. and with general shortages and price rises, i'm having to experiment with a variety of "own brands". i suggest the small packs of 8 or 10 tissues, in multipacks of 6-10. they tend to be very similar price, but much stronger. and of course convenient when going out.

i know this isn't what you were asking, but it might also be worth your husband asking his doctor about "the huff". (if he hasn't already been "instructed".) it can seriously reduce the amount of mucus during the day, and is likely to help him feel better, too. another option might be something like carbocisteine. anyway, worth a visit to gp or a telephone discussion, to see if there's anything s/he can suggest to help.

MargotLedbetter Sun 10-Jul-22 14:51:00

Thank you. I googled Amazon and the Kleenex are no cheaper than I can buy them from any supermarket, but I've bought Amazon's Presto ones, which from the feedback seem to be stronger than the average cheap tissues. I guess if he has to use two at a time it won't cost us any more than the Kleenex.

Thanks for all the ideas.

Chestnut Sun 10-Jul-22 14:54:37

Margot, have you tried Googling 'reusable tissues' as I suggested?

riete Sun 10-Jul-22 15:51:19

chestnut, have you tried reading op's explanation of her husband's tissue-use?

Chestnut Sun 10-Jul-22 16:45:33

There are lots of makes of reusable tissues so some must be okay. I would be trying them rather than buying disposable ones.

SpringyChicken Sun 10-Jul-22 20:46:07

We must be old fashioned. We use men's cotton handkerchiefs and they are washed with the towels on 60C. They last years.

NotSpaghetti Mon 11-Jul-22 11:10:49

I think I’d be looking at alternatives to handkerchiefs if I had to wash 40 or 50 a day because of a serious problem, SpringyChicken.
And, using handkerchiefs I’d probably want to do boil washes - so expensive

MargotLedbetter Wed 13-Jul-22 13:24:38

Thanks. He started using cotton handkerchiefs but the yuk factor — one has to rinse out considerable quantities of mucus before putting them in a hot wash — grossed him and me out.

MargotLedbetter Wed 13-Jul-22 13:44:27

riete

hi MargotLedbetter,

i know your problem only too well. and with general shortages and price rises, i'm having to experiment with a variety of "own brands". i suggest the small packs of 8 or 10 tissues, in multipacks of 6-10. they tend to be very similar price, but much stronger. and of course convenient when going out.

i know this isn't what you were asking, but it might also be worth your husband asking his doctor about "the huff". (if he hasn't already been "instructed".) it can seriously reduce the amount of mucus during the day, and is likely to help him feel better, too. another option might be something like carbocisteine. anyway, worth a visit to gp or a telephone discussion, to see if there's anything s/he can suggest to help.

He does the 'huff' or the local physio's version of it at least twice a day already. That's what keeps this endless supply of mucus flowing.

I had never heard of bronchiectasis until after my husband (who was only 58 and has never smoked) nearly died of pneumonia a few years ago. It can affect anyone of any age and it damages the lungs in such a way that they go permanently into over-production of the slimy mucus that naturally lines the lungs. Imagine you're coughing up twice as much gunk as you did when you last had a nasty chest infection every day for the rest of your life.

MargotLedbetter Wed 13-Jul-22 14:30:09

Sorry, forgot to add that he doesn't need carbocisteine, it's all flowing beautifully, iykwim. (Rather too beautifully at times, hence the need for plenty of strong tissues)

The Presto Amazon tissues are strong enough but a smaller size than the square packs of Kleenex 'large' that we've been using. I shall test out Lidl and Aldi and come back with a verdict!

I'm sorry if I've made anyone squeamish with TMI. We are still, four years, down the line, astonished at all the things the human body can produce.