If you care about living a long, healthy life you should be
thankful for the Industrial Revolution.
Writing in Scientific
American Kevin Bonham (h/t Maggie's Farm) reminds us that innovations like soap and sanitation have been crucial in extending the length and quality of life:
Two of
the most monumental developments in the history of human civilization, likely
the innovations that have saved more human lives than any other, are soap and sanitation. When large
numbers of people congregate in a single location for prolonged periods of
time, excrement and waste quickly rise to unimaginable levels and are capable
of spreading disease incredibly quickly. As I mentioned in my
first post here at Food Matters, many pathogens utilize the fecal-oral
transmission route, in which poop from an infected individual makes its way
into the water supply or onto food by serial contact (touching a contaminated
surface then touching food). Lack of hygiene dramatically increases the
likelihood of this sort of infection, as many infectious microbes can grow
unchecked on filth outside the body, and many viruses can linger on unwashed
surfaces for long periods of time.
As always, we humans have a tendency to take things just a
bit too far. Limiting our exposure to harmful pathogens is one thing;
eliminating our exposure to them is quite another.
Cleanliness may be next to godliness, but no one is
seriously suggesting that we should all live in a perfectly sterile environment.
Bonham explains:
Yet
while there’s no doubt that sanitation and hygiene are critical in reducing the
spread of infectious disease, it’s possible that we’ve gone too far in trying
to live a sterile life.
In
1989, British physician David Strachan proposed the
“Hygiene Hypothesis,” which sought to explain a puzzling series of
observations: Children in cities in developed countries and had fewer siblings,
those that lived more sanitary lives and presumably had less exposure to
infectious diseases, were more likely to develop allergies, asthma and other
atopic diseases than those that lived on farms or in developing countries, or
that had many siblings. In the nearly 25 years since this was first proposed, a great deal of
research has shown that exposure to diverse bacteria or even parasitic
worms helps to train and regulate the immune system, preventing it from
becoming over-active.
If your immune system is never exposed to dirt it will not
develop effectively. If it is exposed to the wrong pathogens it will be
overwhelmed.
Does this mean that the Japanese are wrong to prefer bowing to hugging? Does it mean that good manners are an evolutionary deficit? Not at all. Some exposure to germs is good for your immune system, but overexposure is certainly not. Why take unnecessary risks?
[Addendum: Princeton University has advised students not to share drinking cups, the better to avoid transmitting meningitis to their friends: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/53059616/ns/local_news-new_york_ny/#.UjxfPsakrWg]
3 comments:
Interestingly, the people who survived japanese prisoner of war camps the best were the ones who tried to keep their hands clean which was no mean feat given the circumstances. Their bodies were subjected to a multitude of pathogens that survive in the hot humidity of jungles. Environment alone cause their immune systems to develop or to fail given a variety of factors.
One of the factors that impinges upon children's ability to develop an immune system capable of dealing with life is the fact that far too many of them do not go outside and play and just get plain dirty.
There are people who die in hospitals because those environments are too sterile.
I don't want to keep intimating this, but life requires a balance. For almost every thing there is an opposite that helps to maintain an equilibrium. We need that balance.
Yes we have antibacterial soap in each bathroom and the kitchen, but neither one of us is afraid to go out side and work in the flower beds with our hands in the dirt. It feels good and the results is a beautiful flower which we can enjoy.
I have heard that there are two groups who are most at risk for developing asthma: those who live in highly polluted environments (such as a smoking household) and those who live in pristine, overly clean environments where they hardly come in contact with germs. It makes sense that the immune system needs to have some work to do if it is to learn to kill germs effectively and yet should not be overwhelmed with too many pathogens. A balance is needed. So, basically, let your kids play in the dirt, but wash their hands afterwards.
In the Bible God is the cause of ecological abundance in the land flowing with milk and honey.
So who is killing the bees?
http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/at-the-edge/2013/08/07/bee-colony-collapses-are-more-complex-than-we-thought
http://www.ars.usda.gov/News/docs.htm?docid=15572
My bet is humanity as the cause via a combination of chemicals and destruction of natural habitat.
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