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I'm not sure I agree with their idea here. I grew up on a farm with hay barns and livestock and dust everywhere and still had hay fever and asthma something terrible. But hey, it's a theory all the same I guess. [curious.com]

Healthy dust? It may be the answer to one of modern medicine’s puzzles: why the Amish have such low rates of asthma. The mystery dates to a 20 study which found Amish children have much lower rates of asthma and allergic reactions than Swiss children—a population with extremely similar genetic roots. A 20 study in the New England Journal of Medicine appears to reveal the answer to the riddle: house dust. This time, the researchers compared Amish subjects to Hutterites, another American farming community with a deep European lineage. Again they found the Amish had much lower rates of asthma—about ¼ that of the Hutterites. But when they analyzed dust from Amish and Hutterite homes they found the Amish dust had much higher levels of endotoxins. Endotoxins are toxins created when a bacterial cell disintegrates. When the researchers exposed lab mice to the Amish dust, the mice’s airways became much less sensitive to irritants. So, how did the Amish cultivate this amazing biological dust? The researchers think it’s from their -school lifestyle. In Amish country, kids live closer to barns, near traditional farming equipment like horse-pulled plows. This exposes them to unusual flora-and fauna-borne bacteria—bacteria that loves hanging out in the house dust. Mild exposure to these pathogens could cause human immune systems to develop antibodies and resistance to them. In the immunology world, this is called the hygiene hypothesis, and experts warn it is vastly oversimplified. But it does appear to be helping the Amish breathe more easily. I’m a bit suspicious. I grew up around farms in Kansas, but I don’t care what kind of dust you expose me to: it is 0% guaranteed to trigger an allergy attack.

Learn more about this Curio:
New England Journal of Medicine: "Innate Immunity and Asthma Risk in Amish and Hutterite Farm Children"
Clinical Medicine & Research: "Asthma and Atopy in Rural Children: Is Farming Protective?"
Scientific American: "Why Are Asthma Rates Soaring?"
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: "Amish Children Living in Northern Indiana Have a Very Low Prevalence of Allergic Sensitization"

Captain_Feelgood 8 Aug 6
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Was consideration given to 1) diets lower in processed crap and 2) less exposure to pollutants associated with living in more densely populated and urban areas. Generally speaking, children who grow up on rural farms are likely to eat more whole foods and maybe I'm wrong, but don't the Amish avoid all prepackaged food in favor of homemade? I don't necessarily buy that exposure to dust is "good", but perhaps it's more about what they are not exposed to. Just thinking out loud (on a keyboard). 🙂

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The article does NOT use the "theory" word, why misuse it ? @allamanda
(is Evolution/Climate-change just a 'theory' ? )

[scientificamerican.com]

@Allamanda IMO, those who care about Critical Thinking should also be consistent.

@Allamanda . . . I would not characterize misuse of "theory" by anyone who cares about Critical Thinking as "social skill". ymmv 😛

@Allamanda . . . the posted article is about science. Especially in that context, I think words matter. If they are less meaningful to you, then perhaps it could be easier for you to not seem to be so critical of mine.

Rude is subjective. YMMV

Great article there, Fly... I wish you had read it. I never said this was a "Scientific Theory" ,, did I? From your own link there... "Part of the problem is that the word "theory" means something very different in lay language than it does in science: A scientific theory is an explanation of some aspect of the natural world that has been substantiated through repeated experiments or testing. But to the average Jane or Joe, a theory is just an idea that lives in someone's head, rather than an explanation rooted in experiment and testing." Seriously bro... go take your meds. 🤣😁👍

From personal experience...4 kids, 3 of us jumping around in very old hay in a very old barn having a great time., almost daily. 4th kid had to have special shhets, plastic mattress cover, plastic curtains, room damp-wiped twice a week or an Emergency Room visit from wheezing to blueness.......

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