Oh yeah, why don't we put an air purifier, UV lamp box combo in each office/classroom? I've never thought about that, but it seems like such an obvious thing to do now
I would be surprised if there is no dire second order consequences to raising kids 8h per days in a sterile environment (or more if you also adopt this setup at home).
The immune system needs to be used in order to work properly. Unless we want a life where we cannot step outside of the range of our UV lamps.
> Four main categories of pathogens that humans deal with are viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites. The evidence for pathogens that may be beneficial to the immune system is almost entirely for parasitic worms and friendly (commensal) bacteria. In contrast, many viruses can even trigger the onset of autoimmune diseases or allergies.
The anecdotic evidence they present of immune-system-is-not-a-muscle contradicts anecdotal evidence of doctors, nurses, kids who grew up in a dump, etc. never getting sick due to having amazing immune system.
Absolutely not, most UV is blocked by the ozone layer, this is why we don't all develop skin cancer at 15. Otherwise, what would be the point of the UV-sterilization method?
I've done it, and aside from not being able to breathe well for a while while you douse your mouth and throat with a garden hose, nothing bad will come of it.
I mean, we evolved in these conditions - plenty of UV rays, fresh/clean pre-industrial air, and quite a bit of built-in social distancing between ape tribes.
Putting people in a small poorly-ventilated box with a bunch of strangers (some of whom perhaps recently flew to the other side of the planet and back) is the abberant behavior, really.
> Studies have shown that various immunological and autoimmune diseases are much less common in the developing world than the industrialized world and that immigrants to the industrialized world from the developing world increasingly develop immunological disorders in relation to the length of time since arrival in the industrialized world.[23] This is true for asthma and other chronic inflammatory disorders.[18] The increase in allergy rates is primarily attributed to diet and reduced microbiome diversity, although the mechanistic reasons are unclear.
That certainly seems reasonable -- that the immune system needs practice or otherwise it will start using its ammo on other "hey that's me!" stuff and cause auto-immune diseases.
But I also have to wonder if the kids with auto-immune diseases or "common" allergies elsewhere might just die the first time they encounter some event that'd otherwise be caught and treated in "the first world" ?
> The hygiene hypothesis has difficulty explaining why allergic diseases also occur in less affluent regions. Additionally, exposure to some microbial species actually increases future susceptibility to disease instead, as in the case of infection with rhinovirus (the main source of the common cold) which increases the risk of asthma
I think having a common cold infection each year does not bring any benefits, it certainly does not make anybody immune to common cold
And lots of other UV gets though. Sunlight remains a great disinfectant, maybe not as much as a narrow-spectrum bulb, but it still carries plenty of microbe-killing power. From the actual article:
>> In a paper submitted to the Royal Society of London, they described how over the course of six months they had used sunlight to prevent bacteria from growing in a tube.
Humans have known about this for millennia, with ancient doctors regularly telling people to expose wounds to sunlight. Even animals have been seen instinctively "sunning" a wound. (I remember a BBC doc about Antarctica where a penguin was shown exposing a bite wound to the low-angle sunlight.) Only in recent years has a fear of cancer caused us to retreat from any and all sunlight, a fear revisited as we learn the downsides.
So in our entirely sanitized and sterilized environments we would be free from airborne and waterborne disease, but the moment we step outside of it our underdeveloped immune systems would be incapable of fighting off the common cold? That seems like a bad idea.
That is what vaccines are for. All of the upsides of immune system training with none of the downsides of having to be sick first (also, see “the immune system is not a muscle” article other people posted: immune systems do not appear to generate cross-virus benefits, so there’d be no expected effect on common cold susceptibility)
The most interesting application I’ve seen mentioned was a proposal to shine far-UVC light directly at a patient during surgery. The idea is that it would kill most pathogens that might end up inside the patient while still being mostly harmless to the patient even when being shined inside them.
A core part of the article is that shorter wavelengths are used that don't penetrate as far, so they only cause DNA damage in outer layer cells of the skin that do not replicate. This would not be the case with an open surgical area.
>Instead, it thoroughly damages microbial genomes at random, destroying bacteria and viruses alike, whether they are drug-resistant, vaccine-evasive, or indeed newly emerged.
A view which treats microbes and viruses into generalized buckets of 'good' or 'bad' is far too simplistic. It's interesting that there is no concern with a "random, destroying" action that avoids even a whiff of mention on impact to the vast benign or helpful biomes that would also be randomly destroyed.
Admittedly, I know very little in this space. However, I've formed an opinion that the complex interplay of these biomes has non-deterministic outcomes. Pathogenic microbe impacts could be as much a symptom/reflection of an imbalanced healthy ecosystem within the local environment versus a sudden "invasive" presence that needs destruction. It seems very reckless to indiscriminately torch a local environments microbe population without acknowledging that your well-intentioned efforts may be taking an imbalanced environment and making it even more imbalanced.
At the start of the CoViD pandemic I installed a UV lamp(turned on using a current sensor on the blower fan power wires) in the return air manifold on my furnace. My family still ended up all getting CoViD once one of us got it. But I keep it there because... why not? I'm sure it helps reduce the viral load in the air a bit.
If it breaks, and you buy a new one, you're wasting money. Keeping the ewaste load down will be magnitudes more beneficial than keeping the viral load down.
"This happened despite murine norovirus being more resistant to far-UVC than many common human respiratory viruses, likely due to its tough protein outer ‘shell’.".
Under wide spread use, would viruses simply mutate to being more resistant to far-UVC?
It’s certainly possible, but it might be that it’s very difficult for some organisms to evolve certain protections because adapting can reduce fitness in other ways. So maybe there is a barrier that would help it from UVC but perhaps that makes the virus less likely to bind at key sites and thus not able to replicate.
> Far-UVC is like an aerial disinfectant or bleach, except that it is harmless to humans at practical germicidal doses, and thus should not provoke resistance to its uptake. It does not alter pathogens in a way that allows resistance to emerge, a serious problem for antibiotics. Instead, it thoroughly damages microbial genomes at random, destroying bacteria and viruses alike, whether they are drug-resistant, vaccine-evasive, or indeed newly emerged.
I'v seen a "UV" switch next to the regular light switch in some private GP's offices in eastern europe. But I did immediatly think of skin cancer when i saw that switch.
Oh yeah, why don't we put an air purifier, UV lamp box combo in each office/classroom? I've never thought about that, but it seems like such an obvious thing to do now
I would be surprised if there is no dire second order consequences to raising kids 8h per days in a sterile environment (or more if you also adopt this setup at home). The immune system needs to be used in order to work properly. Unless we want a life where we cannot step outside of the range of our UV lamps.
Maybe fewer consequences than you'd think...
https://rachel.fast.ai/posts/2024-08-13-crowds-vs-friends/
"Your Immune System is Not a Muscle"
> Four main categories of pathogens that humans deal with are viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites. The evidence for pathogens that may be beneficial to the immune system is almost entirely for parasitic worms and friendly (commensal) bacteria. In contrast, many viruses can even trigger the onset of autoimmune diseases or allergies.
I'm one of those that tries to jokingly correct the proponents of an often touted phrase by retorting "If it doesn't kill you, it makes you stranger".
The anecdotic evidence they present of immune-system-is-not-a-muscle contradicts anecdotal evidence of doctors, nurses, kids who grew up in a dump, etc. never getting sick due to having amazing immune system.
The air outside is constantly sterilized by UV light.
Absolutely not, most UV is blocked by the ozone layer, this is why we don't all develop skin cancer at 15. Otherwise, what would be the point of the UV-sterilization method?
Care to taste a spoonful of dirt in a sunny day to see how sterile it is?
This is a pretty common thing kids do. They're generally fine.
I've done it, and aside from not being able to breathe well for a while while you douse your mouth and throat with a garden hose, nothing bad will come of it.
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That's an absolutely textbook https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Association_fallacy
I mean, we evolved in these conditions - plenty of UV rays, fresh/clean pre-industrial air, and quite a bit of built-in social distancing between ape tribes.
Putting people in a small poorly-ventilated box with a bunch of strangers (some of whom perhaps recently flew to the other side of the planet and back) is the abberant behavior, really.
> Studies have shown that various immunological and autoimmune diseases are much less common in the developing world than the industrialized world and that immigrants to the industrialized world from the developing world increasingly develop immunological disorders in relation to the length of time since arrival in the industrialized world.[23] This is true for asthma and other chronic inflammatory disorders.[18] The increase in allergy rates is primarily attributed to diet and reduced microbiome diversity, although the mechanistic reasons are unclear.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hygiene_hypothesis
That certainly seems reasonable -- that the immune system needs practice or otherwise it will start using its ammo on other "hey that's me!" stuff and cause auto-immune diseases.
But I also have to wonder if the kids with auto-immune diseases or "common" allergies elsewhere might just die the first time they encounter some event that'd otherwise be caught and treated in "the first world" ?
From the same wikipedia page:
> The hygiene hypothesis has difficulty explaining why allergic diseases also occur in less affluent regions. Additionally, exposure to some microbial species actually increases future susceptibility to disease instead, as in the case of infection with rhinovirus (the main source of the common cold) which increases the risk of asthma
I think having a common cold infection each year does not bring any benefits, it certainly does not make anybody immune to common cold
I remember having a lot of colds as a kid but haven't had one for years now. I may have gained immunity to a good number of the 200+ different types.
We do. They are called windows. A simple open window lets in fresh air and piles of free UV light.
UVC is blocked by the ozone layer.
Plus the air is not always “fresh” depending on where you live and what time of year. Ozone, smog, smoke, etc.
Plus for those of us with allergies, an open window during for example ragweed season can be a nightmare.
And lots of other UV gets though. Sunlight remains a great disinfectant, maybe not as much as a narrow-spectrum bulb, but it still carries plenty of microbe-killing power. From the actual article:
>> In a paper submitted to the Royal Society of London, they described how over the course of six months they had used sunlight to prevent bacteria from growing in a tube.
Humans have known about this for millennia, with ancient doctors regularly telling people to expose wounds to sunlight. Even animals have been seen instinctively "sunning" a wound. (I remember a BBC doc about Antarctica where a penguin was shown exposing a bite wound to the low-angle sunlight.) Only in recent years has a fear of cancer caused us to retreat from any and all sunlight, a fear revisited as we learn the downsides.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2290997
So in our entirely sanitized and sterilized environments we would be free from airborne and waterborne disease, but the moment we step outside of it our underdeveloped immune systems would be incapable of fighting off the common cold? That seems like a bad idea.
That is what vaccines are for. All of the upsides of immune system training with none of the downsides of having to be sick first (also, see “the immune system is not a muscle” article other people posted: immune systems do not appear to generate cross-virus benefits, so there’d be no expected effect on common cold susceptibility)
Outside gets plenty of ventilation and UV rays.
Trial of Glycol, Far UVC, and CFM Measurement at BIDA
https://www.jefftk.com/p/glycol-far-uvc-and-cfm-measurement-...
The most interesting application I’ve seen mentioned was a proposal to shine far-UVC light directly at a patient during surgery. The idea is that it would kill most pathogens that might end up inside the patient while still being mostly harmless to the patient even when being shined inside them.
A core part of the article is that shorter wavelengths are used that don't penetrate as far, so they only cause DNA damage in outer layer cells of the skin that do not replicate. This would not be the case with an open surgical area.
This gives me great pause:
>Instead, it thoroughly damages microbial genomes at random, destroying bacteria and viruses alike, whether they are drug-resistant, vaccine-evasive, or indeed newly emerged.
A view which treats microbes and viruses into generalized buckets of 'good' or 'bad' is far too simplistic. It's interesting that there is no concern with a "random, destroying" action that avoids even a whiff of mention on impact to the vast benign or helpful biomes that would also be randomly destroyed.
Admittedly, I know very little in this space. However, I've formed an opinion that the complex interplay of these biomes has non-deterministic outcomes. Pathogenic microbe impacts could be as much a symptom/reflection of an imbalanced healthy ecosystem within the local environment versus a sudden "invasive" presence that needs destruction. It seems very reckless to indiscriminately torch a local environments microbe population without acknowledging that your well-intentioned efforts may be taking an imbalanced environment and making it even more imbalanced.
I had thought that there were LED-based far-UV sources already on the consumer market, but the startup I'd heard about, Naomi Wu's NuKit222, uses an excimer-based source, not LEDs: https://www.nukit222.com/pages/nukit-torch-quality-provenanc...
At the start of the CoViD pandemic I installed a UV lamp(turned on using a current sensor on the blower fan power wires) in the return air manifold on my furnace. My family still ended up all getting CoViD once one of us got it. But I keep it there because... why not? I'm sure it helps reduce the viral load in the air a bit.
If it breaks, and you buy a new one, you're wasting money. Keeping the ewaste load down will be magnitudes more beneficial than keeping the viral load down.
This line gave me pause:
"This happened despite murine norovirus being more resistant to far-UVC than many common human respiratory viruses, likely due to its tough protein outer ‘shell’.".
Under wide spread use, would viruses simply mutate to being more resistant to far-UVC?
It’s certainly possible, but it might be that it’s very difficult for some organisms to evolve certain protections because adapting can reduce fitness in other ways. So maybe there is a barrier that would help it from UVC but perhaps that makes the virus less likely to bind at key sites and thus not able to replicate.
The outdoor environment has lots of UV rays from the sun, so this selection pressure has existed for a long time.
Ah, thank you
the article goes on to say:
> Far-UVC is like an aerial disinfectant or bleach, except that it is harmless to humans at practical germicidal doses, and thus should not provoke resistance to its uptake. It does not alter pathogens in a way that allows resistance to emerge, a serious problem for antibiotics. Instead, it thoroughly damages microbial genomes at random, destroying bacteria and viruses alike, whether they are drug-resistant, vaccine-evasive, or indeed newly emerged.
I'v seen a "UV" switch next to the regular light switch in some private GP's offices in eastern europe. But I did immediatly think of skin cancer when i saw that switch.
It's far more dangerous to the eyes than to the skin.
afaik they use it to desinfect the room after or before usage, not during
I'm intrigued. Didn't know places were trying this idea somewhat "at scale." Do you know if they have any findings from where this was deployed?
It's widely used in hospitals. They also use moving robots which enter rooms and shine UV light in them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTFH9X2YIoY
That is awesome! I'm definitely interested to know if they have evidence showing that this leads to better outcomes.
Blows my mind we have only know about UV disinfection for < 100 years.
what do you mean? Electricity is needed first so how come this is strange?
I have used UV disinfection without electricity
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