Skin Inflammation Greenery Does Not Shield Kids from Eczema
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A study has concluded that greenery around the house does not help children from developing atopic eczema, however, it further revealed that nearness to coniferous, mixed forests and agricultural areas was associated with a higher risk of eczema.

Turku/Finland – “General greenness around the home did not protect children against eczema, which was contrary to our expectations and to the hypothesized allergy protective effect of nature contacts. Eczema is, however, only one of the allergic diseases in children, albeit generally the first to emerge,” says MD Minna Lukkarinen, a paediatric specialist from the Finn Brain Birth Cohort Study at the University of Turku, Finland.
Atopic eczema occurs in 20 – 30 percent of children. It breaks out most frequently in the early childhood and is often associated with food allergies and the development of asthma and allergic rhinitis at a later age. It is thought that urbanization and reduced biodiversity increase the risk of allergic diseases, but previous research findings on the topic are contradictory.
The present study utilized material from six Finnish birth cohorts, involving a total of 5,085 children. In a birth cohort, the same children are followed-up from birth, which allows studying associations between environmental early-life exposures and the disease development prior to its onset. This study examined the associations between the season of birth, the greenness and land cover types, surrounding the early-life home, and the development of eczema by the age of two years.
Allergic diseases are among the most common chronic diseases in children with significant public health and economic impact. Finding preventive means are thus urgently called for.
“Although greenness around the home did not protect against eczema, surrounding vegetation can have other beneficial effects. We also must note that greenness is a rather rough measure of nature presence and relatively poor indicator of biodiversity. The observed predisposing association of coniferous forest may indicate that the effects of nature on a child’s immunological development vary depending on the type of nature and the biodiversity and the exact timing of the exposures. Further studies are needed to confirm the result and to reveal the possible mechanisms,” says Anne Karvonen, the Chief Researcher at Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL).
A research article titled Early-life environment and the risk of eczema at 2 years—Meta-analyses of six Finnish birth cohorts has been published in the journal Pediatric Allergy and Immunology.
The study used data from the Flora, Lukas, Steps, Finn Brain, Kuopio Birth Cohort, and Helmi cohorts from the University of Turku, THL, the University of Helsinki, the University of Eastern Finland, and the children's clinics of the central hospitals of Helsinki, Kuopio, and Turku. The study was based on the Finmic collaborative project funded by the Academy of Finland.
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