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Neil: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Neil.
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Alice: and I'm Alice. Neil, what are you eating?
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Neil: Peanuts.
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Alice: Hmm. Did you know that one of the producers, here, has an allergy to peanuts?
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Neil: No, I didn't – but they're not in the studio with us, so it doesn't matter, does it?
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Alice: It only takes a tiny piece of peanut to cause a big allergic reaction in some people.
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An allergy by the way, is a condition that makes you feel ill after eating, touching
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or breathing in a particular substance.
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Neil: And food allergies are the subject of today's show.
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Alice: Alright, put your peanuts down, Neil and answer today's quiz question.
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What substance is used to treat a severe allergic reaction? Is it...
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a) penicillin? b) adrenalin?
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Or c) aspirin?
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Neil: OK, well, I'm going to go for a) penicillin.
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Alice: Well, we'll find out if that's the right answer later on.
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Now let's listen to Dr Marianne Williams talking about why being too clean may not be a good thing.
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She is a dietician here in the UK.
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Dr Marianne Williams: For roughly the first month of life the immune system is switched
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off in essence and everything they [babies] get exposed to in that first month in life
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dogs, cats, aunts, uncles, grannies, grandpas, family, dirt – everything –
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that is where they build up all the bacteria that are then going to colonize their gut in the future.
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Now, if you're born into a very sterile environment,
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as is increasingly the case in the western world, everything's kept terribly clean,
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and one of the theories is that we just are not getting enough exposure
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to a variety of bacteria at that very very early stage in that first month of life.
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Alice: Dr Marianne Williams. The immune system is our body's defence against infection.
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And it's switched off – or not working – for the first month of a baby's life.
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Neil: And through exposure to lots of things in our environment – that's family, pets,
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dirt and so on – young babies meet different bacteria for the first time which colonise
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or live and grow in – their guts.
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Alice: Yes, but in a sterile environment babies don't get exposed to – or don't meet –
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a wide enough variety of bacteria.
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Sterile means completely clean and free of bacteria.
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And there's a theory that being too clean and bacteria-free
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now we have soap, antibiotics and better sanitation
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has lead to an increase in allergies.
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Neil: So dirty play for babies is good – mud, pets, picking stuff up off the floor and eating it.
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Alice: Did you use to eat food off the floor when you were little, Neil?
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Neil: Used to? I still do. I enjoy food from the floor!
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Alice: Well, Neil, what can I say? We're both lucky to be allergy-free.
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I have a friend who has an allergy to gluten
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a protein found in wheat and some other grains
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and she has to be very careful about what she eats so she doesn't get ill.
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Neil: The supermarkets are quite helpful, though, aren't they,
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with products 'free from this' and 'free from that'?
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Alice: This is helpful, yes. But the food industry is now marketing their products to
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attract consumers who don't have a proven – or tested – allergy.
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Neil: Why would you buy free-from foods if you don't have a food allergy?
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Alice: Well, people have started to believe that certain foods
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like gluten or dairy are bad for us,
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though there isn't any medical evidence to support this.
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Let's hear about how rickets
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a disease caused by a lack of Vitamin D in the diet
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is affecting some children in the UK.
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This is BBC reporter Mike Williams.
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Mike Williams: Rickets is common in the developing world but this is London in the 21st century.
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These children aren't malnourished because they're too poor to eat well ... it's the opposite.
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Their often middle-class parents are spending money to give them foods with ingredients taken out.
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It's as if some of us have become unnecessarily frightened of our food.
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Neil: Rickets usually affects malnourished childrenfrom poor countries– children who
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don't have enough to eat – and it makes their bones weak.
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But here in London some parents are buying their children expensive free-from foods
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for example to avoid dairy
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and are sometimes making them very ill.
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Alice: It sounds crazy, doesn't it?
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Neil: Yeah... it's nuts! Get it? Nuts.
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Alice: Very good.
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Neil: Yes. Nuts - that means crazy. Now I think it's time for the answer to today's quiz question.
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Alice: OK, then. So earlier in the show I asked:
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What substance is used to treat a severe allergic reaction?
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Is it... a) penicillin? b) adrenalin? Or c) aspirin?
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Neil: I said a) penicillin.
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Alice: And you were wrong, Neil! The correct answer is b) adrenalin.
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An injection of adrenalin can be used to treat anaphylaxis
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or severe allergic reactions ... to insect stings,
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foods, drugs, and other allergens.
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Antibiotics such as penicillin treat bacterial infections
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and aspirin is a painkiller you might take for a headache.
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Neil: OK, can you tell us the words we heard today again please, Alice?
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Alice: Sure. They are:
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allergy
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immune system
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switched off
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colonise
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get exposed to
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sterile
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gluten
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proven
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rickets
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malnourished
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nuts
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anaphylaxis
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Neil: Well, that's the end of today's 6 Minute English. Don't be afraid to join us again soon.
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Alice: You know where to find us, don't you? Go to bbclearningenglish.com where you'll
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find grammar points, vocabulary and more editions of 6 Minute English.
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Both: Bye.