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Your health: Let kids play in the dirt

Let kids play in dirt, new book advises

If you read about children's health, you've heard a lot of this before: Microbes, vilified because they cause infectious diseases, can be beneficial to a child's well-being.

Our society's penchant for hyper-cleanliness is actually making our children less healthy and more prone to allergies.

But microbiologists B. Brett Findlay and Marie-Claire Arrieta make that case with an unusually convincing display of evidence — as well as historical anecdotes and a parent-friendly sense of humor — in their new book, “Let Them Eat Dirt: Saving Your Child from an Oversanitized World,” The Washington Post reports.

They advocate exposing your children to the great, messy outdoors. Their guide to transitioning babies to solid foods warns: “Don't delay the introduction of allergenic foods. Offer peanuts, soy, shellfish, etc. … between four and seven months of age.”

This is followed by an entertaining recitation of what babies eat in other countries, concluding, “The next time your child refuses to eat something you offer, remind her that she should be thankful she's not in Tibet, where babies eat barley flour mixed with yak butter tea!”

Get a pet, they say, if you can take care of one. Specifically, get a dog instead of a cat, because a cat will probably spend more time indoors and not be very effusive, while a dog has to be taken out for walks a couple of times a day and will come inside and jump on you and lick your face.

Probably the fastest-reading and most fun chapter is the Q&A, for which Findlay and Arrieta polled parents to come up with a list of cleanliness-related questions: When should children wash their hands? What kind of soap? Should I let people hold my baby? Are sandboxes unsanitary? Is antibiotic ointment necessary when treating scratches and cuts? Is it safe for a child to put something in his mouth after it's been dropped on the ground? And so on. (From the answer to the last question: A recent Swedish study found that babies whose parents clean the pacifier by sucking on it get fewer allergies than those whose parents rinse the pacifier in tap water. On the other hand, the pacifier-sucking parent may pass on cavity-inducing microbes. The take-away: Life is complicated.)

An Alzheimer's drug fails

Another major Alzheimer's drug study has failed, leaving patients and families wondering if there ever will be a treatment to slow or reverse the most common form of dementia, which afflicts more than 5 million in the United States alone, The Associated Press reports.

Eli Lilly & Co. said last week solanezumab failed to slow mental decline in people with mild Alzheimer's.

The drug is still being tried in two other studies, and at least 18 other drugs are in late-stage testing, including several similar to solanezumab.

Dietary therapies, supplements and even a medical device also are being tried.

“There are other approaches that we need to pursue. We need to redouble our efforts,” said Maria Carrillo, chief science officer of the Alzheimer's Association.

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