ROTTERDAM, Netherlands, Sept. 11 (UPI) -- Dutch researchers
say their findings do not support the "hygiene hypothesis" that
children who attend early day care do not have asthma later.
The study, published in American Journal of Respiratory and
Critical Care Medicine, found any perceived protection against
asthma and allergies due to greater exposure to illnesses
disappeared by age 8.
Dr. Johan de Jongste of Erasmus University in Rotterdam, the
Netherlands, and colleagues tracked more than 3,500 Dutch children
in the Prevention and Incidence of Asthma and Mite Allergy Study and
found children starting day care early -- before age 2 -- were twice
as likely as those not going to day care to experience wheezing in
the first year of life.
A slight trend for less wheezing among early day care
attendees was noted by age 5, but by age 8, there was no protective
or harmful effect. The effects of day care on wheezing did not
differ between boys and girls, but were more marked in children with
older siblings.
"Early day care merely seems to shift the burden of
respiratory morbidity to an earlier age where it is more troublesome
than at a later age," de Jongste, the chief investigator, said in a
statement. "Early day care should not be promoted for reasons of
preventing asthma and allergy."