Washing dishes by hand
linked to fewer allergies in kids
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[February 24, 2015]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - Parents who wash dishes
by hand, instead of in a dishwasher, are less likely to have kids with
allergies, according to a new study from Sweden.
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While the researchers can’t say avoiding dishwashing machines
prevents childhood allergies, they suggest that bacteria left on
hand-washed plates may teach the body to tolerate its environment.
Other studies have suggested that growing up on farms and living in
developing countries reduce a child’s risk of allergies, the
researchers wrote February 23 in the journal Pediatrics.
The study’s lead author told Reuters Health by email that while
those earlier findings are interesting, they can’t realistically be
used to reduce allergies among children. For example, you can’t tell
parents to buy a farm.
“We are trying to find sources of ‘harmless’ microbial exposures in
daily life that may be good enough to reduce allergy in children who
are otherwise not exposed to a rich microbial flora in the same way
as farm-living children,” said Dr. Bill Hesselmar of the University
of Gothenburg.
Hesselmar and his colleagues analyzed data from a 2007 survey of
Swedish parents of 1,029 children ages seven and eight.
About 12% usually washed dishes by hand; 84% usually used a
dishwashing machine.
About 23% of children from homes where dishes were hand-washed had
eczema, a skin inflammation usually brought on by an allergy. The
same was true for 38% of kids whose parents who usually used a
dishwasher.
Similarly, about 2% of kids in homes with hand-washed dishes had
asthma, compared to about 7% of kids using machine-washed dishes.
Even after accounting for other factors that may influence allergies
among kids, the researchers found that those who lived in homes with
hand-washed dishes were less likely to have allergies.
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Overall, washing dishes by hand was tied to a 43% reduced risk of
allergies.
Using fermented foods and buying directly from farms strengthened
the link, according to the researchers.
In an editorial, Drs. Laurence Cheng and Michael Cabana from the
University of California, San Francisco note that several questions
still need answers.
For example, why does washing dishes by hand appear to protect more
against skin conditions than against itchy eyes and running noses?
And for the most part, the researchers would have to assume that
parents’ dishwashing habits remained unchanged since the children’s
infancy for the hygiene hypothesis to be applicable.
“Future recommendations may be based on these findings, but only if
the results could be confirmed in new studies,” Hesselmar said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1ACOrRm
and http://bit.ly/1ACOsVi
Pediatrics 2015.
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