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Obsessive cleanliness ain't good for you

Is that so? Research shows that a little dirt actually does us a lot of good; it makes us healthier, even smarter.

Updated on: Mar 08, 2014 08:25 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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A clean house is the new urban fantasy. Spotless floors 99.9% free of germs. Gleaming kitchen surfaces wiped down with "doctor-approved" soap. Water pouring out from RO purifiers. Ozone disinfectant devices to sterilise fruits, veggies and meat. Toilets doused with antibacterial gels.

Air-conditioners keeping out every speck of dust. And insect repellent liberally sprayed in every crevice. There's medicated soap in the bathroom, germ-resistant sponges in the kitchen and in the bedroom, bacteria-retardant sheets and hypo-allergenic pillows. And when leaving home, don't forget your little tube of hand sanitiser and wet wipes to clean any surface you will come in contact with.

Read: Simple ways to maintain hand hygiene

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Dr Tickoo explains why obsessive cleanliness has disastrous consequences on our wellbeing. "Early exposure to the naturally occurring microbes in soil helps build stronger, more disease-resistant bodies," he explains. "Without enough exposure to different bacteria and microbes, the immune system does not get enough practice. It becomes kind of lazy, and also begins to attack inwards, leading to higher rates of asthma, eczema and other autoimmune diseases." So quite simply, the more bacteria we eliminate externally, the less our body learns to fight them from within, weakening our disease-fighting ability and making us more vulnerable to disease and infection.

Allergy cases across India have risen over the years. Ravi Mantha, a science writer and author of All About Bacteria believes that they're a result of our immune systems over-reacting. "There is a lot of evidence that interacting with dirt fine-tunes our immune system," he says.

"The main compounds in antibiotic wipes, creams and soaps - triclosan and triclocarban - are now also being added to chopping boards, refrigerators, plastic lunch boxes, and mattresses in an attempt to halt the spread of microbes," he says. "But studies show that these antibiotic chemicals are no more likely to prevent gastrointestinal or respiratory illness than regular soap. In fact, for chronically sick patients, antibiotic soaps were actually associated with increases in the frequencies of fevers, runny noses and coughs."

Read: To breathe easier, clean up vehicles

Advertisements for disinfectant household products are probably the worst offenders when it comes to demonising bacteria. Most of them portray their products as a solution to disease, not a possible cause of it. And the majority of them are presented as specifically to keep children safe.

"Just look at the term 'disinfect', which is a term that only a marketing genius could have thought of," Mantha writes in his book. "It is a opposite of infect, a word that in our minds evokes a notion that some bad bugs have taken over a surface in our body or home and are threatening to wage a war against us. In a single word, 'disinfectant' not only puts fear in our minds that we are under attack, but also offers a solution in a bottle that will repel invaders. Brilliant!"

Mantha's book cites several problems with this approach. Bacteria found on surfaces in the home and on the body are actually perfectly safe - they do not need to be repelled or interfered with. And disinfectants are only temporarily effective. "The bacteria are back within minutes or even seconds,' he writes. "Using disinfectant is the household equivalent of trying to empty the ocean using a bucket!"

Draw the clean line
Dr Chand Wattal, head of Microbiology at Delhi's Sir Ganga Ram Hospital warns against trying to make your home completely sterile. For one thing, it's impossible, but more importantly, it is not needed. "We have evolved with these micro organisms and need to exist in harmony with them," he says.

He explains that our skins are home to two kinds of microbes; resident flora (that which is always present) and transient flora (that which transfers onto us). He says that good old soap and water is enough to get rid of transient flora. But anti-bacterial chemicals destroy everything in their path, even the resident flora, which is good for you. This upsets the balance of good and bad bacteria and "may, in fact, lead to problems like dermatitis and allergy". Washing away bacteria has another side effect. It often causes the bacteria to return as a more resistant strain - bad news, indeed, since diseases caused by resistant strains are harder to cure.

HT Column: Basic hygiene works better than drugs

A better strategy is to ensure that you have a healthier immune system by regular exposure to natural environment and work at building up your resistance from the inside. Mantha suggests restricting the fastidious cleanliness to the home toilet and the hospital's operating room. Avoid using products labelled anti-bacterial, germ-fighting, disinfectant and the like in your personal care and domestic cleaning routine. Use hypoallergenic pillows only if you are already allergic. Add disinfectant (or antibacterial soap) to your shower routine only on days you've walked through slush. Don't substitute those drying hand-sanitising gels for a tap wash. Don't sterilise every surface you come into contact with, and don't stop your child from playing outside. You and your family will emerge stronger.

From HT Brunch, March 9

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