Earn $ 13,000 / year thanks to ... selling your own manure

Selling manure discharged by yourself can earn USD 13,000 / year (nearly VND 300 million). This demand is still high in Australia. The seller must comply with strict eating regulations.

The Australian Center for Gastrointestinal Diseases (CDD) is willing to pay for the repurchase of healthy people. Each time the manure is sold, the seller will be paid 50 USD by CDD. A person can sell feces five times a week and receive $ 250, which will earn $ 13,000 a year, according to the Daily Mail.

Doctors use this stool to treat gastrointestinal diseases by transplanting stool into the intestinal tract of patients. Many people with intestinal diseases cause dead or too few beneficial bacteria in the intestine.

Picture 1 of Earn $ 13,000 / year thanks to ... selling your own manure
Donors must also follow a strict diet.

Meanwhile, these bacteria have a lot in the stool of healthy donors. One of the people who regularly performs stool transplants is Professor Thomas Borody of CDD. On average, he conducts 10 stool transplants every day and now he performs about 12,000 cases.

The reason CDD offers attractive buying price because they are lacking of donors. Not only that, the criteria required in donors are quite strict. Donors must not only be tested for blood but also have to undergo 3 different quality tests.

In addition, the donor must also follow a strict diet. Their diet must not only be healthy but also not eat corn, shrimp, crabs, snails, ham, sausages and antibiotics, according to the Daily Mail.

Donors must also visit the CDD headquarters in the Five Dock suburb of Sydney (Australia) at least 1 hour before donation. The reason is that the stool must be implanted into the recipient's intestine within a few hours after being released from the donor's body.

One case of benefit from stool transplantation is Kerryn Barnett, 38. She suffers from a rare gastrointestinal disease called delayed gastric emptying that makes the intestines difficult to absorb nutrients.

The doctor had to remove part of the large intestine and transplant half a kilogram of stool from the donor into Barnett's intestine. This treatment has helped her significantly improve her health, according to the Daily Mail.