Dr. Lisa Iannattone Profile picture
Oct 15, 2022 15 tweets 4 min read Read on X
The “hygiene hypothesis” is the misnomer that just won’t die. We don’t need to get sick to be well. A better name is the “biodiversity hypothesis” since the rise in allergic/immune diseases is thought to be related to the loss of contact with biodiverse environments (nature!).
We have millions of microbes on our skin and in our guts (our microbiome) that interact with and influence the functioning of our immune systems. Every day. Every second. Our immune systems never quit.
This is an area of active research so there’s still a lot we don’t fully understand (hence why it’s still a hypothesis) but essentially a more diverse microbiome is associated with a lower risk of immune system disorders like allergies and celiac disease.
The reduction in living organisms in urban environments (concrete jungles) is thought to lead to homogeneity in our personal microbes, which increases the risk of immune disorders. Hygiene, antibiotics, processed foods and pollution are also thought to contribute to dysbiosis.
Several studies have shown that both adults and kids living in rural areas have more diverse gut microbes than urban populations in the West.
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P… Of particular interest is t...
There are also studies like this one where in two comparable communities that differ mainly in the way they farm (traditional vs industrial) the authors observed a protective effect of the traditional farming environment against asthma.
nejm.org/doi/full/10.10…
And more recently, there was an absolutely fascinating human intervention trial done to study the effect that bringing the forest back to playtime might have on daycare children’s immune systems.
science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…
They studied 10 daycare centers in Finland:
-3 that were already forest based (positive control)
-3 standard daycares (control group)
-4 standard daycares in the intervention group that received forest floor, sod, planters for growing annuals, peat blocks for climbing and digging
The kids, 3-5 year olds, were encouraged to “play in the dirt” (planting, making crafts with natural materials) twice a day. They spent an average of 1.5 hours a day outside. The trial lasted 28 days.
After only 28 days, there was a net increase in the diversity and richness of the kids’ skin bacteria, leading to diversity results that were similar to the kids attending nature-oriented daycares. Figure 1 from the study sho...
Ok that’s nice but did it impact their immune systems? Yes! They had an increase in regulatory T cells and molecules (IL-10, TGF-B1) and a decrease in IL-17 (an inflammatory molecule). These changes were positively associated with the increased diversity in their skin bacteria! Figure 2 from the study sho...
This study lends further support to the biodiversity hypothesis by demonstrating that regular exposure to a rich, diverse microbial environment (friendly microbes or “old friends”) can modulate the microbiome and stimulate immunoregulatory pathways. After only 28 days!!
So yes there’s science supporting the idea that “kids should play in the dirt” and no this is not the same as the incorrect notion that kids catching pathogenic viruses is good for their immune systems — a common misinterpretation of the hygiene (biodiversity) hypothesis. Picture of the yard in an i...
This is a good interview with one of the authors that explains the findings in accessible language:
helsinki.fi/en/faculty-bio…
Finally this is an article that discusses the origins and evolution of the hygiene hypothesis. An important line:
“Measles and many respiratory diseases proved not to be protective against allergic disease, and, in many cases, even increased the risk.”
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…

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More from @lisa_iannattone

Mar 4, 2024
Public health has changed a lot since covid. Here’s a really concrete example of that. In 2019, PH in Montreal published a really detailed list of places people were exposed to measles: bus routes, malls, walmart, etc. In 2024? The list is just healthcare, schools + the airport.
From a 2019 Montreal Gazette article:  Those sites include the Walmart store on the Chomedey autoroute; the Second Cup outlet as well as common areas near Gate 2 at Carrefour Laval; the Laval Excellence gymnastics club on St-Martin Blvd. E.; the Oeufrier restaurant, the Dollarama store and Proxim pharmacy on Laurentides Blvd.  Buses running on the No. 20 and 70 routes in Laval at specific times on June 26 are also deemed as at-risk areas.  The areas and precise exposure times are available at the ministry’s website. A person considered contagious visited the mall on June 26.  The call for v...
The list of measles exposures from the 2024 Montreal outbreak which includes on healthcare facilities, childcare/school and the airport.
Why the sudden change in what information is made public? I highly doubt that *none* of these measles cases exposed people anywhere else. Did any of them go to a pharmacy or grocery store or coffee shop or hockey rink? And if so, why aren’t any of these locations being published?
Not publishing these locations means 1. people don’t have the opportunity to protect themselves and others post-exposure and 2. the fact that people are actively being exposed in the community (not just clinics and airports) is not being made explicit for the public.
Read 6 tweets
Dec 15, 2023
@Penelope19920 @jvipondmd As soon as the IPAC email goes out letting everyone know they need to wear masks, everyone wears masks. If IPAC decides everyone has to wear respirators, then everyone wears respirators. This actually isn’t hard at all. Why leadership would make it seem like it is, is baffling.
@Penelope19920 @jvipondmd They lean on hand wave-y concepts like mask fatigue when I have never once received a survey asking me how I felt about masking. None of this is evidence based. Since 2022, they seem to be making decisions based on “feels”.
@Penelope19920 @jvipondmd Do you know what happens in hospitals when HCWs get hand washing fatigue? They hire people to patrol the wards and make sure we’re washing our hands when we’re going in and out of patient rooms. They don’t give us hand washing breaks and just let c.diff run wild for a while. 😒
Read 4 tweets
Dec 8, 2023
StatCan just dropped a bombshell report on LC. This is the most important figure. It highlights that the risk of long term symptoms is cumulative, it increases with increasing number of infections. By 3+ infections, 38% report long term symptoms — that’s 1 in every 2.6 people. 🤯 Data table for Chart 2 — Percentage of Canadian adults with long term symptoms, by number of self reported covid-19 infections, June 2023 1 infection — 14.6% 2 infections — 25.4% 3 or more infections — 37.9%
Right now 1 in every 9 Canadians has long covid. 80% have symptoms for longer than 6 months and 50% just never recovered.

Full report here:
www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/75-006-…
How long before the majority of the population is at 3+ infections and 1 in every 2-3 people is suffering from long covid?

What’s the plan @GovCanHealth? Full speed ahead or? 🚆
Read 8 tweets
Dec 2, 2023
We’re in our *3rd* post-lockdown viral respiratory season and admissions for viral resp illness+pneumonia are 6 standard deviations above the historical average. I do not understand how so many reasonable people haven’t figured out that the “immunity debt” scapegoat is disinfo.🧵
It’s not the lockdowns, it’s the covid. Covid damages immune systems. Catching covid makes people more susceptible to catching other infections. Immunity theft, not immunity debt. A thread of evidence:
This study found that the risk of RSV infection needing medical attention was 40% higher in kids that had covid vs those that didn’t. Both in 2021 and 2022. Yes they checked twice.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37832975/
Read 31 tweets
Nov 17, 2023
“We report a consistent increase in the risk of persistent symptoms after reinfection compared to first infection. All post-acute symptoms mentioned in the WHO clinical case definition appeared more common after reinfection than after a 1st infection”

‘RoBuSt HyBriD iMmuNiTy’ 🤪 Screenshot of the article linked in the next tweet “The burden of post-acute COVID-19 symptoms in a multinational network cohort analysis”
Yet another study showing that more infections = more morbidity. Can we like warn people maybe? Feels like something people might want to know.
nature.com/articles/s4146…
“Escalation of commitment: A human behavior pattern in which an individual or group facing increasingly negative outcomes from a decision, action, or investment nevertheless continue the behavior instead of altering course.”

¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Read 9 tweets
Nov 14, 2023
I’m very optimistic that vaccine/treatment breakthroughs + better air hygiene standards will change the game at some point. But I’d also like to point out that preserving one’s short and long term health is an endgame in and of itself. It’s the endgame for so many things we do…
The endgame of exercise? Health.
The endgame of limiting alcohol? Health.
The endgame of treated tap water? Health.
The endgame of tossing spoiled food? Health.
The endgame of cooking meat to temp? Health.
The endgame of washing your hands? Health.
The endgame of screening and checkups? Health.
The endgame of carseats and seatbelts? Health.
The endgame of helmets? Health.
The endgame of brushing your teeth? Health.
The endgame of condoms? Health.
The endgame of indoor smoking bans? Health.
Read 7 tweets

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