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> When I was a kid in Australia decades ago we'd never heard of peanut allergies and swapping peanut butter sandwiches at school was the norm.

Recognition of severe peanut allergies plus a common false hypothesis that early exposure increased the risk of such allergies developing led lots of parents in lots of places for a few decades to avoid their children having early exposure, leading to a huge increase in severe allergies (because it turns out, early exposure actually reduces the risk, which was recognized in large part because Israel, where the avoidance thing not only didn't catch on but where peanut-based puffed snacks remained a popular snack for kids from pretty much when they could eat solid food, was conspicuously left out of the major upswing in peanut allergies). Since the recognition that avoidance is counterproductive has worked its way into general advice in the last few years, we should see a noticeable drop in the incidence.

> Same with asthma. Something has gone terribly wrong.

Lots of stuff going on with asthma, I think: It's got a genetic component and treatment getting better probably increases the incidence, all other things being equal, there's a lot of known environmental factors, some of which are probably increasing in probability of exposure, and it’s also made more noticeable and more likely to be diagnosed by allergies and other co-occurring inflammatory conditions, which gets back to the allergy discussion...



"…Israel, where the avoidance thing not only didn't catch on but where peanut-based puffed snacks remained a popular snack for kids from pretty much when they could eat solid food, was conspicuously left out of the major upswing in peanut allergies)."

Seems that common sense prevailed there.

"Lots of stuff going on with asthma,…"

I grew up in a cold, damp mountain environment where mists and rain were commonplace (by the time Ventolin/salbutamol came onto the market in the late '60s I'd have left school), and I recall no kids that I knew who had asthma. I'm not saying that asthma was unknown, I'm just saying it wasn't as common as it seems to be these days.

Again, I'd like to know the stats, population versus reported incidents by year etc., so we had a handle on what's actually happened over this timeframe.




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