At lunch with my
Wife and a few of her friends, the topic turned to the need for vigilant hand
washing and latex glove changing when dealing with the outside world. Since they were all retired elementary school
teachers who spent decades with snotty nosed and coughing young children, this
was not such a surprise. Still, I could
not stop thinking of a recent photograph I had seen of a healthy and chubby
toddler from Mongolia, sitting on the dirt floor of his parent’s Yurt. Raised
on unpasteurized milk and eating flecks of dirt and an occasional bug off the
floor, there is an excellent chance this happy child will have a strong immune
system and live well past 100, like many others in his country.
Are
we becoming too clean for our own health?
As a nation that spends billions on personal hygiene products, are we
doing more harm than good? What steps
should we be taking to boost the immune systems of our young children?
A
recent study from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggests
we do indeed have a problem. The study
found that among our children there is a 50% increase in food allergies and a
69% increase in skin allergies since the late 1990’s. The most popular theory is the “hygiene
hypothesis” which believes that exposure to germs and parasites in early
childhood may prevent the body from developing certain allergies.
If
there is in fact a downside to America’s culture of disinfection and overuse of
antibiotics, there is also a no brainer response. Let kids be kids and permit common sense
exposure to our “dirty environment.” A visit down to the farm stepping in
manure and hugging goats would not hurt. Every surface in the home does not
need to be as sterile as an operating room.
The occasional cold does not require massive medical intervention. In short, moderation is much healthier than
an all out assault on the germs that share our world. And a lot more fun.
No comments:
Post a Comment