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Pathogens, Microbes and Bacteria--Oh My!

Yesterday, after I noticed Cooper licking a very public bench, I started to think about things like germs, viruses, bacteria, pathogens and infectious microbes. Imagine that. Though today parents are often armed with an arsenal of hand-wipes and hand sanitizer and are strict enforcers of the hand washing rule, it’s only been since the mid-nineteenth century that we had any idea at all how illness was spread. As I did some research for this blog, I was surprised to learn that all of the advances in modern medicine in the last several decades have had less of an effect on the spread of disease than changes in human behavior.  Hand washing wasn’t even a common practice until after 1847 when Hungarian doctor Ignaz Semmelweis noticed that many more new mothers were developing life-threatening infections and high fevers just after giving birth if his students took part in delivering their babies than if a midwife helped to deliver the baby. Why was this? Many of the medical students attended the births right after performing autopsies and educational cadaver dissections.  Instead of washing their hands between the two, they’d simply wipe their hands on their clothes as they walked to the delivery room. I think every single parent today would like to thank Dr. Semmelweis for this discovery. Aaaack! (Evolution and History of Personal Hygiene by Ingrid Koo, Ph.D)
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Other important discoveries were made by Dr. John Snow who discovered that drinking water sources often played a major role in the spread of illness. Drinking water that was prone to contamination from animal or human waste coming from upstream or direct contamination from sewage (that was emptied from chamber pots right into the streets) were related to deadly cholera outbreaks. Thank you, Dr. Snow. Last, but not least, was Thomas Crapper of England, who played a major role in the development of the “flushing toilet” which took waste through a series of pipes, to a location far from the humans who had excreted the waste to begin with. Not only was the waste far enough away and contained so that it would not contaminate drinking water, it no longer needed to be disposed of by hand. Thank you, Tom Crapper! Unfortunately, despite being aware of these invisible dangers, parents can’t always prevent their curious offspring from putting disgusting things into their mouths—like Cooper sucking on the bench, or the time I caught Lauren licking the armrest on an airplane or crawling baby Kate tasting a piece of dried up dog poop in the backyard. We also need to thank Dr. Alexander Fleming for stumbling upon the antibiotic properties of penicillin during his study of bacteria and American Dr. Jonas Salk for coming up with world's first vaccine.  What is the grossest object you have caught your baby mouthing?
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40 comments

  • My girls have licked playground equipment and eaten sand. Bleck!

    delia jones on
  • Grossest thing I have seen my child licking would be the side of the toilet ring. Gratefully this was at home and I had just cleaned it the day before. So thankful for the discovery of hand washing and cleaning in general. I just try not to overdo it because TOO clean or sterile of an environment can be bad too.

    Richarla Den Oudsten on
  • I know rationally that exposure to some germs and good for building up immunity, but I have a hard time not overreacting in circumstances like that.

    Jennifer G on
  • Yes it’s so hard not to be paranoid about germs but I have learned to relax a little about it. You can’t protect them from everything. It helps build up their immune system anyway! I always find pieces of mulch from the yard in my 11month olds mouth.. Nothing too gross yet though.

    Rayna Johnson on
  • Germs are so gross!! I try not to think about it because my baby is always touching things! Thanks for sharing this was a fun read.

    Danielle Wojtusik on

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