Increasing evidence suggests that the alarming rise in allergic and autoimmune disorders during the past few decades is at least partly attributable to our lack of exposure to microorganisms that once covered our food and us. As nature’s blanket, the potentially pathogenic and benign microorganisms associated with the dirt that once covered every aspect of our preindustrial day guaranteed a time-honored co-evolutionary process that established “normal” background levels and kept our bodies from overreacting to foreign bodies. This research suggests that reintroducing some of the organisms from the mud and water of our natural world would help avoid an overreaction of an otherwise healthy immune response that results in such chronic diseases as Type 1 diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, multiple sclerosis and a host of allergic disorders.In a world of hand sanitizer and wet wipes (not to mention double tall skinny soy vanilla lattes), we can scarcely imagine the preindustrial lifestyle that resulted in the daily intake of trillions of helpful organisms. For nearly all of human history, this began with maternal transmission of beneficial microbes during passage through the birth canal — mother to child. However, the alarming increase in the rate of Caesarean section births means a potential loss of microbiota from one generation to the next. And for most of us in the industrialized world, the microbial cleansing continues throughout life. Nature’s dirt floor has been replaced by tile; our once soiled and sooted bodies and clothes are cleaned almost daily; our muddy water is filtered and treated; our rotting and fermenting food has been chilled; and the cowshed has been neatly tucked out of sight. While these improvements in hygiene and sanitation deserve applause, they have inadvertently given rise to a set of truly human-made diseases.While comforting to the germ-phobic public, the too-shiny produce and triple-washed and bagged leafy greens in our local grocery aisle are hardly recognized by our immune system as food. The immune system is essentially a sensory mechanism for recognizing microbial challenges from the environment. Just as your tongue and nose are used to sense suitability for consumption, your immune system has receptors for sampling the environment, rigorous mechanisms for dealing with friend or foe, and a memory. Your immune system even has the capacity to learn.
Do we have more allergies now because we are too clean?
Do we have more allergies now because we are too clean?
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/21/opini ... .html?_r=3
Do we have more allergies now because we are too clean?
See also, http://www.sciencemag.org/content/336/6080/489.abstract
tl;dr: we're breeding a new generation of pussies whose immune system sucks ass because they don't eat dirt like us goddamn sexual tyrannosauruses.
tl;dr: we're breeding a new generation of pussies whose immune system sucks ass because they don't eat dirt like us goddamn sexual tyrannosauruses.
Do we have more allergies now because we are too clean?
Does eating an unclean hooker count as dirty? Just askin' cause I have a friend....he might have....well, he might want to know the answer to this.
Can I borrow your towel? My car just hit a water buffalo.
Do we have more allergies now because we are too clean?
On a serious note, Mrs. 95 and I have often discussed this when it comes to vaccinations etc. Both of our kids were vaccinated for chicken pox and both have since had it and I'm almost thankful they did. I think they'll be more immune in the future for shingles etc.
I often subscribe to the "if it doesn't kill you" theory. Of course that only works if it doesn't kill you.
I often subscribe to the "if it doesn't kill you" theory. Of course that only works if it doesn't kill you.
Can I borrow your towel? My car just hit a water buffalo.
Do we have more allergies now because we are too clean?
I only wash my hands if I use some sort of bathroom or toiletry. I'm not the type to wash my hands just for the sake of it; if I just finished changing a car tire and I don't see any very visible grease marks on me, I'm fine eating a drumstick by hand.