
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The trillions of microbes that live in and on the human body—collectively known as the microbiome—appear to have profoundly important effects on our health. This raises a potential concern: some of our most significant public health interventions—vaccines, antibiotics, sanitation—are designed to kill or limit exposure to harmful germs. Have we gone too far in our war against microbial exposure? Let's take a closer look.
By ACSH5
66 ratings
The trillions of microbes that live in and on the human body—collectively known as the microbiome—appear to have profoundly important effects on our health. This raises a potential concern: some of our most significant public health interventions—vaccines, antibiotics, sanitation—are designed to kill or limit exposure to harmful germs. Have we gone too far in our war against microbial exposure? Let's take a closer look.

78,464 Listeners

1,382 Listeners

759 Listeners

12,206 Listeners

6,412 Listeners

60 Listeners

111,863 Listeners

14,234 Listeners

6,548 Listeners

634 Listeners

15,616 Listeners

386 Listeners

5,894 Listeners