• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Senior Daily news for seniors

Senior Daily

Entertainment, Health, Deal News for Seniors

Deals - Health - Education -  Tech - Entertainment - About Us - Home - Search

What’s the scoop on kids and dirt? Get enough to help, but not enough to hurt, a doctor advises

By Cosby Stone Last Updated Monday, November 24, 2025 12:25 pm

Whenever I am asked what I do for a living, the phrase “I’m an allergist” is almost immediately followed by “So, where are all of these allergies coming from?”

Maybe I’ll get sick of that question some day, but I haven’t yet. As a clinician and researcher on allergies and public health, I first explain that when a society begins to become aware of a disease, the reported prevalence will go up. This is understandable. People who have medically unexplained symptoms wonder “Could I have this allergy that’s being talked about?” and try on the diagnosis. Sometimes an allergy really is at the root of their problems, and sometimes it’s not.

For example, at least 50% of patient-reported food allergies are only presumed. They have not been evaluated thoroughly enough to know for sure whether the patient is allergic. Research also demonstrates that, in many cases, we presume wrongly. The symptoms fit better with an intolerance than an allergy, or the events were coincidental. While 11%-12% of patients currently report a food allergy, only about 5% of adults and 8% of children likely have true food allergy. Around 8% of patients report a penicillin allergy, but fewer than five out of 100 patients who report a penicillin allergy can be shown to be allergic when tested.

Many people next ask whether allergies are genetic, but allergies in one’s family appear to explain only 10%-40% of a person’s increased risk for allergies. Allergic diseases are also increasing at rates that are inconsistent with genetic diseases.

More interesting is that there appear to have been different waves in which allergies appeared in historical records. Hay fever (environmental allergies) first appeared in the 1800s, followed by more recent increases in asthma and food allergy.

What’s changed, and what’s dirt got to do with it?

So if genetics don’t fully explain the rise in allergy, what does?
Some of the most consistent risk factors for allergic diseases include overuse of antibiotics; acute viral respiratory infections in childhood; birth by cesarean section; nutritional disorders; second-hand smoke exposure; pollution; and the environment where you grew up

To organize these risks into categories, two conceptual hypotheses currently seem to be of value – the barrier hypothesis and the hygiene hypothesis.

Imagine that your immune system is an army behind a castle wall. The castle wall is your skin, your respiratory tract and your gastrointestinal tract. The army is composed of your white blood cells in addition to other cells in the body that can activate these gung-ho Marines to defend you.

The central tenet of the barrier hypothesis is that when our skin, respiratory tract and gastrointestinal tract are chronically injured, your castle wall is broken down. The soldiers of the immune system are activated to aggressive defense, yet allergens can penetrate, and people can begin to experience allergic inflammation in those areas. This has been most clearly demonstrated with the allergic skin disease known as eczema.

Research has also shown that activities in these barrier sites can flavor the immune response and profile of a person, especially in childhood. Many risk factors for allergic disease, such as viral infections, nutritional disorders, smoke exposure and pollution, affect the health of our barriers. Studies have indicated that up to 50% of childhood eczema, a barrier disease, can be prevented simply by applying protective emollients like petroleum jelly to protect babies’ skin when we bathe them.

The role of hygiene in allergy

The central tenet of the hygiene hypothesis is that we have gone a bit too far and inadvertently killed off our good bacteria along with the bad. As our society progressed from one that was chronically burdened with infectious diseases caused by poor sanitation, the thinking goes, we reduced our exposures to the things that gave our immune system an appropriate training and tolerance. Historically, our totally rational fear of dying from a cholera epidemic led to sewage and water management, but may have kicked off the allergy epidemic.

Our overuse of antibiotics and C-sections affects the set of organisms called the microbiome that an infant is exposed to growing up. Both have been shown to increase the risk of childhood allergic diseases.

Growing up in a rural area exposed to farm animals appears to confer a decreased risk of allergies and asthma for your entire lifetime, even among genetically similar populations. Studies in mice have shown that inhaling certain molecules from soil-dwelling bacteria can set off a beneficial cascade promoting an immune system which focuses more on threats rather than nonthreats, such as allergens.

Vaccinations appear to be a crucial exception to the rule of the hygiene hypothesis. They confer protection against diseases without any associated increase in the risk of allergic disease, likely because they, unlike antibiotics, are very specifically targeting only the worst disease-causing organisms.

Our current prescription

The data currently paints a picture that we might prevent allergies in the future by protecting our barriers and introducing the right tolerizing exposures at the right time, such as early introduction of peanuts. However, I can’t currently tell you how much dirt or what kinds of bacteria your child needs to safely experience while growing up. It’s too soon for that, but many wonderful scientists around the world are working on these questions, thanks to support from a variety of governments and foundations.

Until then, I will share with you the broad-brush advice that I currently give my friends and patients. The Conversation

  • Let your kids play outside, get dirty, try new foods and be exposed to a variety of things. Advocate for them to have outside recess time in school as much as possible.
  • Use plain soap and water; you don’t need to sanitize everything.
  • Talk to your doctor about watchful waiting to respond to an illness, rather than take antibiotics.
  • Be judicious about what you put on your body’s barriers, and become an advocate for clean air, clean water and a clean environment for everyone.
  • Get all of your routine vaccinations. The healthiest children in the U.S. are the ones who are fully vaccinated.

Cosby Stone, Instructor in Allergy/Immunology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Vanderbilt University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Filed Under: Health Return to Senior Daily Home Page

About Cosby Stone

Dr. Cosby Stone, Jr. MD, MPH (Physician-Scientist Instructor in Allergy/Immunology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center) grew up in rural Crossville, Tennessee and went to college at Vanderbilt University where he enjoyed studying languages, literature, mathematics, and science. He completed medical school at the University of Alabama in Birmingham, with additional training in public health focused on epidemiology. He served as an NIH Fogarty Scholar from 2008-2009, living abroad in Tanzania and doing research in nutrition, HIV, and health education. Afterwards he did residency/chief residency at Yale-New Haven Hospital in the combined internal medicine and pediatrics residency program. He is happy to have returned to Tennessee as first a clinical fellow, then a research fellow, and finally a faculty member in allergy/immunology at Vanderbilt. His previous area of research focus was on prevention of allergic disease. His current main area of research focuses on medication allergies, specifically immediate hypersensitivity reactions to antibiotics and to inactive ingredients such as alpha-gal and polyethylene glycol. He is currently funded by the Learning Healthcare System at Vanderbilt via a K-12 from AHRQ to study how the implementation of a validated strategy to remove low risk penicillin allergies affects inpatient antibiotic utilization and patient outcomes. He is also a published poet.

Primary Sidebar

Weekly Grocery Ads

  • Albertsons
  • Aldi
  • Food Lion
  • Fresh Market
  • Harris Teeter
  • Kroger
  • Lowe's Foods
  • Publix
  • Safeway
  • Sprouts
  • Whole Foods

Big Retailer Ads

  • Costco
  • Home Depot
  • Lowes Hardware
  • Target
  • Walmart

Useful Links

  • TV Guide for Today
  • Top 10 TV Shows from Nielsen
  • TV Listings 1975-76
  • AARP TV Recommendations
  • Today's Top TV Shows from IMDB
  • Top Movies - 50 Years Ago
  • NY Times Best Seller List
  • Best Places to Retire in the US
  • Medicare Website
  • Social Security Website
  • AARP
  • Celebrity deaths

Features You May Have Missed

Creating a Facebook account

How to Use Facebook to Reconnect with Your Past

Saturday, May 1, 2021

Facebook is a great place to reconnect with people from your past. It can take a bit of detective work, but if the people you’re looking for are online, you can probably find them.

Is This The Best Pain Relief Medication?

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

The most effective pain relief medication available today – even better than prescription drugs – might be a combination of two popular over-the-counter drugs, recent studies have shown.

Apple Airtag

Do You Need a Tracking Device?

Monday, September 5, 2022

Do you ever have trouble finding your car keys? Or your wallet? Or your remote control? A bluetooth tracker may be what you need. Senior Daily tech expert Michael Miller explains the options.

This Day in History
Today's Holiday
Todays Birthday
Word of the Day
Quote of the Day
Article of the Day
This Day in History, Today's Holiday, Birthday, Article of the Day provided by TheFreeDictionary.com

Terms of Use: Senior Daily is not directly affiliated with the brands, companies or retailers of the products listed on this web site, and in no way claims to represent or own their trademarks, logos, marketing materials, or products. Any trademarks that appear are the exclusive property of their owners. © 2022 Senior Daily | Facebook | Contact: editor@seniordaily.com | Gil Arnold 9954 Lodestone Drive, Brentwood, TN 37027