TOXICS INFORMATION
PROJECT (TIP)
(Lighting the way to
Less Toxic Living)
LIBERTY GOODWIN, DIRECTOR
P.O. Box 40441,
Providence, RI 02940
Tel. 401-351-9193,
E-Mail: TIP@toxicsinfo.org
WEBSITE: WWW.TOXICSINFO.ORG
Jeanna
Bryner, LiveScience Staff Writer
LiveScience.com
Fri Sep 14, 10:45 AM ET
A dose of dirt
could be the best medicine for preventing allergies in kids who've never had
them.
While avoiding
excessive contact with germs can help prevent the spread of infections, going
overboard with cleanliness could be at least partly responsible for an increase
in allergies among children, mounting research suggests.
"We’ve
developed a cleanlier lifestyle, and our bodies no longer need to fight germs
as much as they did in the past," said Marc McMorris, a pediatric
allergist at the University of Michigan Health System. "As a result, the
immune system has shifted away from fighting infection to developing more
allergic tendencies."
More than 50
percent of Americans ages 6 to 59 years are sensitive to at least one allergen,
according to a national survey conducted from 1988 to 1994 by the National
Institutes of Health. That's two to five times higher than rates found in a
previous 1976 to 1980 survey.
Recent research
has found evidence for the so-called hygiene hypothesis, which explains how
more sterile environments can lead to higher rates of illness. For instance,
scientists in Germany recently found children exposed to farm animals (and the
associated bacteria and other microbes hiding out there) were about half as
likely as other children to develop the autoimmune illness Crohn's disease.
More animal
helpers
Allergies are a
reaction by the body's immune system to foreign, yet generally innocuous,
substances, including pollen, mold, animal dander, dust and certain foods that
it deems harmful. If your immune system has never or rarely detected even the
natural background level of such substances, it can go haywire when contact
does occur.
"Allergies
are on the rise because our society has changed the way we live," McMorris
said, adding that "as a result, people with allergies are having children
with others who have allergies, which in turn creates a natural increase in the
prevalence of allergies in our society.”
In addition to
exposure to farm animals, dogs and cats kept as pets could also help children
avoid developing allergies. A study published in a 2002 issue of JAMA concluded
that children living in a house with two or more dogs or cats during their
first year of life were much less likely to develop allergic diseases compared
with children raised without pets.
"Epidemiology
would suggest if there are 10 cats in the homes, [kids] are less likely to
develop allergies," said Bruce Bochner, director of the Division of
Allergy and Clinical Immunology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
More research is
needed, however, to pin down exactly what's going on. Bochner said one flaw
with these studies is that homes with pet-allergic kids are not likely to have
lots of pets.
The dirty
truth
From the constant
use of anti-bacterial soap for dish- and hand-washing to air-tight seals around
doors and windows, some modern homes have become shrines to hygiene. Add vaccinations and antibiotics to the mix
and the body's immune system can get too much artificial reprieve from nature.
"The natural
immune system does not have as much to do as it did 50 years ago, because we've
increased our efforts to protect our children from dirt and germs,"
McMorris said in a statement released this month.
Plus, the atrophy
of family size means children get exposed to fewer germs than the more kid-filled
homes of yesteryear. Families with
three or more children, a dynamic that was common decades ago, tend to have
fewer allergies as they are exposed to more bacteria- and virus-harboring
siblings, McMorris said.
The battle
against bugs doesn't have to come to an end, but finding a balance between
healthy living and clean living is a must, scientists advise, although Bochner
notes the jury is still out on the over-exposure approach.
"We don't
know at this point whether we should be exposing people to lots of allergens at
an early age and get them tolerant [or not]," Bochner said in a telephone
interview. "All we really know is
once you become allergic, since exposure triggers symptoms, the best way to
deal with that is to reduce your exposure."
McMorris says
we've gone too far though with germ-avoidance.
"I don't
think we should put kids in a bubble," McMorris told LiveScience. At the end of the day, he said, parents
should just let kids be kids.
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