City children more likely to suffer food allergies

August 18, 2014  13:10

Children living in towns and cities are more likely to be allergic to milk, eggs and peanuts than their country cousins, according to a new study.

Scientists at Johns Hopkins University in the US said one in ten urban kids had major food allergy - and the true figure could be even higher, The Telegraph reported.

The authors suspect exposure to pollutants might be to blame – especially for children who have not built up immunities from common bacteria which are prevalent in nature but rare in the concrete jungle.

The researchers tracked the first five years of 516 children living in Baltimore, Boston, New York City and St. Louis, measuring their exposure to allergens each year while tracking their diets and general health.

While nearly 10 per cent of them had full-blown allergies to milk, eggs or peanuts, more than half – 55 per cent – were classified as ‘sensitive’ to the foods.

Breastfed children were at even higher risk, but children living with higher levels of endotoxin – a chemical released by many bacteria – were partially shielded.

That detail will galvanise proponents of the ‘hygiene hypothesis’ which says exposure to microbes at an early age can help build up the child’s defences against asthma and allergies.

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