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Why letting children get dirty reduces the risk of them getting sick.
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11-04-2011, 05:28 PM
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letittbe
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Why letting children get dirty reduces the risk of them getting sick.
I posted about this in the old GIM......the problem with American is that most of them are to "sanitize", in my travels and adventures overseas I was about the only one who never got sick because of the water or other disease in the area, even if I have a lot of broken bones and other physical problems I have never been sick like from asma or something like that.
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Why letting children get dirty reduces the risk of them getting sick.
By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 7:16 AM on 4th November 2011
Comments (43) Add to My Stories Share Parents have long suspected letting their children get a bit dirty won’t do them any harm – even if the modern health and safety police say otherwise.
And according to scientists, that parental instinct was right all along.
Children who come home splattered in mud after playing are less likely to develop allergies as they get older, the researchers found.
Up to no good! Playing in the mud could boost youngsters' immune systems
Their developing immune systems are exposed to a greater variety of bacteria than those of their cleaner counterparts, so they can cope better when germs are encountered later in life.
One in four of us now suffers from some kind of allergy, a figure that has risen in recent decades – as parents have become more worried about hygiene.
More...Playgrounds scrapped and children to share unisex toilets as schools look to accommodate 350,000 extra pupils
Researchers at the University of Copenhagen studied 411 children for 12 years from birth, and identified a direct link between the number of different bacteria found in their bodies and the risk of developing allergies later in life.
Professor Hans Bisgaard, who led the study, published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, said: ‘What matters is to encounter a large number of different bacteria early in life when the immune system is developing and 'learning'.
‘Our new findings match the discoveries we have made in the fields of asthma and hay fever.’
Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz1cnGnDJwr
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