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OverviewGroundbreaking studies have shown that an absence of certain of microbes in children may be at the root of some of the most prevalent childhood ailments. Written by two experts in the field, this book takes on our oversanitized culture, from pregnancy to birth to early childhood, and explains how we can have a healthier relationship with our microbes. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Dr B Brett Finlay, Oc, PhD , Dr Marie-Claire Arrieta, PhDPublisher: Algonquin Books Imprint: Algonquin Books Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 20.60cm Weight: 0.318kg ISBN: 9781616207380ISBN 10: 1616207388 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 05 September 2017 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsGreat book! Very clear, down to earth, and interesting; it reads like a story!<i>Let Them Eat Dirt</i>takes an important and complex subject and makes it less scary. <b> Eran Elinav, M.D., Ph.D., Principal Investigator, Host-microbiome Interaction Research Group at theWeizmann Institute of Science andSenior Fellow, Canadian Institute For Advanced Research</b> What a triumph. This book should be read by every pregnant woman, every parent, every pediatrician. It's not just a great read but terribly important. <b> Professor Margaret McFall-Ngai, Member of the National Academy of Sciences and Director of Pacific Biosciences Research Center, University of Hawaii.</b> A must-read for parents, teachers and any healthcare provider for children, <i>Let Them Eat Dirt</i> takes you inside the inside tract of a child s gut, and shows you how to give kids the best immune start early in life. <b> William Sears, M.D, co-author, <i>The Baby Book</i></b> With the quiet weight of their authority, pioneer researchers Brett Finlay and Claire Arrieta help parents to understand the real nature of microbes, and then to act to improve their children's health. <b> Martin Blaser, author of <i>Missing Microbes</i> (and Director of the NYU Human Microbiome Program)</b> This book might change your perspective on real cleanliness... and along the way help you to raise healthier kids. <b> Giulia Enders, author of international bestseller <i>Gut</i></b> Solid, easily assimilated evidence showing how microbes are an integral part of a child's healthy life. <b> </b><i><b>Kirkus Reviews</b></i> Finlay and Arrieta explain, in illuminating detail, the importance of the gut microbiome They hope to restore the powerful benefits of microbe transfer from the environment to the young child, benefits lost as a side effect of efforts to reduce infectious disease risk and of cultural attitudes that conflate dirt with disease .The focus on practical choices before and during birth makes this book a good resource for expectant parents. <b><i>Publishers Weekly</i></b> A must-read for parents, teachers and any healthcare provider for children, Let Them Eat Dirt takes you inside the inside tract of a child's gut, and shows you how to give kids the best immune start early in life. --William Sears, MD, coauthor of The Baby Book I loved this book. --Dr. Richard Besser, Chief Health and Medical Editor at ABC News With the quiet weight of their authority, pioneer researchers Brett Finlay and Claire Arrieta help parents to understand the real nature of microbes, and then to act to improve their children's health. --Martin Blaser, author of Missing Microbes This book might change your perspective on real cleanliness . . . and along the way help you to raise healthier kids. --Giulia Enders, author of Gut As a parent and a microbiologist, I appreciated the up-to-date and actionable science that Let Them Eat Dirt highlights, including the groundbreaking work conducted in the authors' own lab. As a Professor of Pediatrics, I appreciated the accessible format and writing style that makes this wealth of information and its limitations easy to understand for the increasing crowd parents who are concerned about their children and their growing microbiomes. Let Them Eat Dirt gives an entertaining, engaging and accurate view of what we're discovering about the microbiome and why it matters for you and your children. --Rob Knight, Professor of Pediatrics and Computer Science Engineering, and Director, Center for Microbiome Innovation, UC San Diego, and author of Follow Your Gut: The Enormous Impact of Tiny Microbes What a triumph. This book should be read by every pregnant woman, every parent, every pediatrician. It's not just a great read but terribly important. --Professor Margaret McFall-Ngai, Member of the National Academy of Sciences and Director of Pacific Biosciences Research Center, University of Hawaii. Great book! Very clear, down to earth, and interesting; it reads like a story! Let Them Eat Dirt takes an important and complex subject and makes it less scary. --Eran Elinav, M.D., Ph.D., Principal Investigator, Host-microbiome Interaction Research Group at the Weizmann Institute of Science and Senior Fellow, Canadian Institute For Advanced Research Solid, easily assimilated evidence showing how microbes are an integral part of a child's healthy life. --Kirkus Reviews Finlay and Arrieta explain, in illuminating detail, the importance of the gut microbiome...They hope to restore the powerful benefits of microbe transfer from the environment to the young child, benefits lost as a side effect of efforts to reduce infectious disease risk and of cultural attitudes that conflate dirt with disease....The focus on practical choices before and during birth makes this book a good resource for expectant parents. --Publishers Weekly Author InformationB. Brett Finlay, PhD, is professor of microbiology at the University of British Columbia and a world leader in how bacterial infections work. He has been studying microbes for over thirty years and has published over four hundred and fifty articles. Also a founder of the biotech companies Inimex, Vedanta, and Microbiome Insights, Brett is Officer of the Order of Canada--the highest Canadian civilian recognition. He lives in Vancouver, BC, with his wife, who is a pediatrician, and has two grown-up kids. Marie-Claire Arrieta, PhD, has been studying how intestinal alterations lead to several immune diseases since 2007. She has worked in the Finlay lab as a postdoctoral fellow for four years. During that time she has established herself as an outstanding researcher in the field of microbiota. Claire has combined her knowledge of microbes and immunology to lead a major clinical study on the role of the microbiota in asthma. She played a central role in building the bioinformatics techniques needed to analyze the microbiota from these clinical studies and has demonstrated that certain species of the intestinal microbiota from three-month-old children determine whether that child will succumb to asthma later in life. This seminal finding is a major reason for this book, as scientists in many other fields are now starting to realize that the early life microbiota plays a major role in diseases that present many years later. A mother of two, Claire is a tireless advocate of using scientific knowledge to improve the health of children. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |