Iâm so, so hopeful that Iâm a few decades people will look back at our terrible indoor air quality the way we look at indoor smoking, breathing in leaded gasoline fumes, etc. One of those things that just seems like an unimaginable way to live once youâve experienced the alternative.
Our liberal use of propane indoors will be seen as completely unhinged.
I am not one of those anti-vaxx loonies who are like âyou got an immune system so youâre fine without all this crapâ, however isnât it an accepted view that the immune system needs training to operate well? Hygiene hypothesis comes to mind and especially during those years as a child many parts of the immune system are forming and developing.
Going too clean everywhere will counter that and lead to worse outcomes later in life if you get sick with something. So while I sympathise as a parent with a preschooler who is terrible when sick, it is useful to not be too super clean in that environment.
Now in areas where more grown-ups are working, office spaces and so on, sure. Not quite against that.
Kids in daycare are sick a wild amount of time. Nearly constantly during the indoor seasons, and only often in outdoor seasons.
I cannot read the article (laungage barrier), but I expect being 20% less sick is a net gain. Instead of 20 illnesses a year, only 16.
I admit I donât know very much about any of this, but Iâve never heard of children who grow up in relatively isolated circumstances, for example home schooling, having lower functioning immune systems?
I canât find anything on differences in indoor hygiene causing a difference to the immune system. Homeschooled children will still be exposed to the same viruses through their parents or anyone else. It may very well be a misunderstood study from the 80s. It is currently neither confirmed or proven wrong.
However Iâve found a slightly different study. It compares children who go to conventional kindergartens to children in outdoor kindergartens. Iâm not sure if youâre familiar with that these âforest-kindergardensâ, but the general idea is that the kids are outside all day. Due to the need for warm clothing and constantly getting dirty, they usually wear the same outdoor suit throughout the week. Theyâre exposed to natural bacteria a lot more, but less so to airborne viruses.
So itâs not exactly the same thing you asked for, but it does show a difference in their immune systems.
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.aba2578
Another study showing the same thing through a different comparison of children in rural vs. suburban areas.
https://www.ucc.ie/en/news/2023/rural-environment-supports-childrens-immune-systems.html
The problem is when you are constantly sick because of the school, its a real problem my family in Florida faces every school year. I visited them this last year during the spring and they were sick for the entire visit and apparently it happens every year now. Plus, after covid everything seems like it got much worse on the preventing infection side of things, so this tech would most likely be a net positive, even if it does affect the immune system and its natural defenses.
If only there was something that could help us with that. đČđłđŽ
Indoor plants help add oxygen/reduce co2 as well as help regulate relative humidity, and some research suggests they may absorb certain VOCs, but they do nothing to trap pathogens. Any olâ paper filter does a great job of trapping pathogens though.
Instead weâll build something that needs a subscription, and you can only get the filters from 1st party sources and the filters have a chip that requires you to swap them even if they are not full
I have never seen a consumer air purifier with a chip in the filter and I have quite a few, do you have an example?
I believe it was a joke/prediction based on the many examples of this happening. See printer ink or keurig cups as a couple.
Im actually kind of surprised that dyson didnât bravely pioneer drmâd filters.
But I only go on social media to be angry!!!
What a wasteful idea. Completely unnecessary in most cases.
Just as wasteful as all the other things we do for hygiene, such as soap and sanitizers. Some things are worth spending on I think, both in terms of money and in resources.