The Unintended (and Deadly) Consequences of Living in the Industrialized World
Scientists believe dirt could explain why some of the wealthiest countries suffer from afflictions rarely seen in less-developed nations
- By Andrew Curry
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2013, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Puzzling over her results, von Mutius came across a paper by David Strachan, a British physician who had examined the medical records of 17,000 British children for clues to what caused allergies later in life. Strachan found that kids with a lot of older brothers and sisters had lower rates of hay fever and eczema, probably because the siblings brought home colds, flus and other germs.
After learning of Strachan’s study, von Mutius wondered whether air pollution might somehow protect East Germans from respiratory allergies.
Soon, studies from around the world showed similarly surprising results. But it was germ-laden dirt that seemed to matter, not air pollution. The children of full-time farmers in rural Switzerland and Bavaria, for example, had far fewer allergies than their non-farming peers. And a study following more than 1,000 babies in Arizona showed that, unless parents also had asthma, living in houses with dogs reduced the chances of wheezing and allergies later in life. Researchers proposed that the more microbial agents that children are exposed to early in life, the less likely they are to develop allergies and autoimmune diseases later on. Studies also showed that baby mice kept in sterile environments were more likely to face autoimmune disease, seeming to back what came to be called the “hygiene hypothesis.”
“It was so unexpected,” says von Mutius, who now believes air pollution was a red herring. Instead, East German children may have benefited from time spent in daycare.
Think about it this way: At birth, our immune cells make up an aggressive army with no sense of who its enemies are. But the more bad guys the immune system is exposed to during life’s early years, the more discerning it gets. “The immune system is programmed within the first two years of life,” says Knip. “With less early infection, the immune system has too little to do, so it starts looking for other targets.”
Sometimes the immune system overreacts to things it should simply ignore, like cat dander, eggs, peanuts or pollen. Those are allergies. And sometimes the immune system turns on the body itself, attacking the cells we need to produce insulin (Type 1 diabetes) or hair follicles (alopecia) or even targeting the central nervous system (multiple sclerosis). Those are autoimmune disorders.
Both appear to be mostly modern phenomena. A century ago, more people lived on farms or in the countryside. Antibiotics hadn’t been invented yet. Families were larger, and children spent more time outside. Water came straight from wells, lakes and rivers. Kids running barefoot picked up parasites like hookworms. All these circumstances gave young immune systems a workout, keeping allergy and autoimmune diseases at bay.
In places where living conditions resemble this “pre-hygiene” past—rural parts of Africa, South America and Asia—the disorders remain uncommon. It can be tempting to dismiss the differences as genetic. But disease rates in the industrialized world have risen too fast, up to 3 or 4 percent a year in recent decades, to be explained by evolutionary changes in DNA. “You can see quite clearly in a pre-hygiene situation you don’t see allergic disease,” says Thomas Platts-Mills, an allergy specialist at the University of Virginia. “Move to a hygiene society, and it does not matter your race or ethnicity—allergy rises.”
These findings don’t mean that people should eschew basic hygiene. Its benefits are clear: In the past 60 years or so, our overall life expectancy has continued to rise. The trick for scientists is to determine exactly which early life exposures to germs might matter and identify the biology behind their potentially protective effect.
That’s one big way Knip’s research on the Finland-Russia border can contribute. The accident of geography and history playing out there offers a chance to work in what Knip calls a “living laboratory.”
“It’s really an exciting opportunity,” says Richard Insel, chief scientific officer for the New York City-based Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.
***
Just a few hours after we arrive in Petrozavodsk, I follow Knip and his team to a morning meeting at the Karelian Ministry of Health. Russian officials on the other side of a long conference table explain through an interpreter that they haven’t recruited as many study participants as their Finnish and Estonian colleagues. Parents in Petrozavodsk are unfamiliar with the practice of conducting medical studies, reluctant to submit their babies to what they see as painful blood tests and too stressed to fill out long surveys on diet and family history.
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Comments (13)
I found your story fascinating until I got to this sentence: "...I sit down with Tatyana Varlamova, a young doctor in a thigh-length lab coat and black pumps." What benefit does this passage have to do with telling the story? None, it just objectifies a female. As a fellow journalist, I was taught to not include this type of description unless it was pertinent to the story. In other words, if this was a male doctor, would you have written that his lab coat was casually unbuttoned at the top, showing a wisp of chest hair? Didn't think so.
Posted by oxi clean on May 5,2013 | 06:25 PM
As a parent whose child participated in probiotic research studies this article is fascinating. So many of my childrens friends are allergic to something , its out of control. Super clean anti bacterial soap may be fabulous but how does our body get stronger if theres nothing to learn from? How can our bodies function with only over processed food to function on. Its comes right back to moderation and common sense, no rusty nails but maybe swimming in the pond.. accepting natural fats in foods and letting our bodies use them properly by getting off the couch and playing tag with our children. Stimulated minds and bodies are far less trouble than bored ones.. as any parent will tell you durjng school holidays .
Posted by sandie on April 14,2013 | 02:58 PM
I would be interested in seeing if the diets of the two groups have been compared. I would be willing to bet that the Finnish children have a much higher amount of processed foods in their diet than the poorer, more remote Russian children. That is a major difference in children growing up in all industrialized areas vs those in non industrialized, or lesser - access to and consumption of processed foods.
Posted by questions on April 8,2013 | 10:52 PM
50% of this article came from An Epidemic of Absence by Moises Velasquez-Manoff. I think a reference to his work is necessary.
Posted by Matt on April 4,2013 | 03:32 AM
"Excellent article! I would love to see more of this research performed." It has, and put to rest the 'hygiene hypothesis'. It is interesting but doesn't stack up in the long run. The Otago longitudinal study has disproved this. Children exposed to environmental hazards as dust mites and pollens in their first years have higher rates of asthma and similar diseases
Posted by snoot on April 1,2013 | 10:37 PM
Was an consideration given to the fact that in more industrialized societies more modern medicine can diagnose and treat diabetes where in less industrial societies they just die? Not to discount the theory, just curious what the infant mortality rates compare and how it relates to diabetes in particular
Posted by Aaron on March 28,2013 | 06:40 PM
I believe that similar unintended consequences are due to protecting children with (undoubtedly useful) helmets when on a bike and similar devices. They may encourage reckless behavior - while if you fall off the bike and bloody your nose, it is a lesson you will not forget as long as you live. Padding football players (look at photos from the 1940's and 1950's!) created brutish behavior on the playing field. Dirt IS good!
Posted by John Szalkay on March 28,2013 | 04:59 PM
"A century ago, more people lived on farms or in the countryside. Antibiotics hadn’t been invented yet. Families were larger, and children spent more time outside. Water came straight from wells, lakes and rivers. Kids running barefoot picked up parasites like hookworms." And babies weren't named until the first year of life had passed because so many infants died before the first birthday. The population of our planet experienced a great explosion when microorganisms were identified as the source of so many infections that killed off the very young and the elderly. Autoimmune disease is the trade-off. Revelations 9:6?
Posted by Robin Burns on March 24,2013 | 05:00 PM
We'd better get going with this kind of research before we start thinking seriously about multi-generational space travel. We will have to bring some of our germs with us but which ones?
Posted by Frank Lowney on March 24,2013 | 01:36 PM
One irony of the "too clean" problem is that meanwhile we are adding chemicals to the environment that we did not evolve to deal with. And these chemicals are disrupting natural systems (ex. endocrine systems), causing cancer, and contributing to respiratory and other illnesses.
Posted by Dorothy Tompkins on March 24,2013 | 11:52 AM
One thing i didn't see mentioned: i wonder what the childhood death rates in the poorer places are. Perhaps our hygiene allows vulnerable children to live into adulthood, while in poorer countries, the children who would later grow to be allergic or diabetic adults, simply don't make it.
Posted by esther on March 23,2013 | 11:50 PM
Really interesting article and well written with the exception of this line. What is the relevance of this Andrew Curry??? Sounds terribly objectifying and sexist! "I sit down with Tatyana Varlamova, a young doctor in a thigh-length white lab coat and black pumps."
Posted by Renee MCKEON on March 23,2013 | 01:38 PM
Excellent article! I would love to see more of this research performed.
Posted by Marc on March 23,2013 | 01:08 PM