Search for a command to run...
This article explores the ecological roots of chronic disease by examining how modern life may alter the body’s relationship with biodiversity, environmental microbial exposure, and immune balance. Moving beyond the narrow opposition between germs and cleanliness, it argues that hygiene, while essential for protecting human life, does not fully account for health. Drawing on research linking biodiversity, microbiota, urbanization, allergy, inflammation, and immune regulation, the article considers how reduced contact with diverse living environments may contribute to dysbiosis, weakened tolerance, chronic inflammation, and other long-term forms of physiological unrest. It also reflects on how sealed indoor life, filtered urban environments, and ecologically thinned daily routines may narrow the microbial encounters that once helped shape human resilience. Rather than proposing a single cause of chronic illness, the article presents ecology as one important thread within a wider fabric that includes pollution, stress, diet, inequality, and medical access. Through a blend of scientific interpretation and reflective narrative, it suggests that some chronic diseases may be read not only as biomedical events, but also as expressions of ecological estrangement. The article ultimately calls for a wider understanding of health: one that respects hygiene where necessary, while also recognizing that human well-being has never been separate from the living world that surrounds, enters, and helps educate the body.