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cover of episode One Doctor's Decision to Stop Showering

One Doctor's Decision to Stop Showering

2025/1/24
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Chasing Life

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James Hamblin
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Sanjay Gupta
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Sanjay Gupta: 我个人减少了淋浴的频率,几乎不使用洗发水,只用清水洗脸。我认为这有助于我开始新的一天,这是一种日常的仪式感。 James Hamblin: 通过研究,我发现我们日常的个人卫生习惯中,大部分是文化和个人偏好,而非实际的健康益处。市面上很多清洁产品夸大其健康益处,我们对不使用这些产品的人存在偏见。其实,除了洗手和清理体液外,大多数清洁产品只是为了让人看起来、感觉和闻起来更好,这是一种社会规范。过度清洁会破坏皮肤微生物群,然后我们又试图通过益生菌等产品来补充它,这是一种不必要的循环。热水澡和清洁剂会暂时破坏皮肤微生物群,这可能会加剧炎症性疾病。除非是手术等特殊情况,否则抗菌肥皂的效用不大。无菌和卫生经常被混用,但它们并非一回事。卫生有助于去除可见的污垢,例如通过洗手去除喷嚏或咳嗽后残留在手上的粘液。人们对清洁的观念存在很多误区,因为这方面仍然比较私密,存在很多污名化。如果感觉良好且不冒犯他人,那么可以减少清洁的频率和程度。改变卫生习惯应该循序渐进,而不是突然改变。剧烈运动后需要清洗掉汗水和污垢,但通常清水就足够了。肥皂的主要作用是去除难以用水冲洗掉的污垢。总的来说,我不建议大家减少淋浴次数,而是希望大家能够更理性地看待清洁行为,根据自身情况选择合适的清洁方式。市面上很多清洁产品夸大其健康益处,人们应该根据自身情况选择清洁方式。如果某种清洁方式让你感觉良好,那么就坚持下去;如果觉得繁琐或无效,可以尝试减少清洁频率和程度。新年计划不应总是增加更多的事情,有时减少一些事情反而更好。

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Dr. Sanjay Gupta and Dr. James Hamblin discuss the cultural aspects of showering habits and the science behind the skin microbiome. They question the necessity of daily showering with soap and shampoo, considering whether it is mostly cultural preference or actual health benefit.
  • Daily showering is largely a cultural and personal preference, not necessarily a health requirement.
  • The skin microbiome is affected by frequent showering, potentially disrupting its balance and leading to skin issues.
  • Excessive showering might remove essential oils from the skin, which is detrimental to its health.

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There's a reason the Sleep Number smart bed is the number one best bed for couples. It's because you can each choose what's right for you whenever you like. Firmer or softer on either side, Sleep Number does that. One side cooler and the other side warmer, Sleep Number does that too. You have to feel it to believe it. Sleep better together. And now save 50% on the new Sleep Number limited edition smart bed. Limited time. Exclusively at a Sleep Number store near you.

See store or sleepnumber.com for details. Welcome to Chasing Life. You know, I promised that we were going to take a slightly different approach to the new year. Instead of committing to do more, more, more, which is typically what happens this time of year, I wanted to convince you instead of the value of sometimes doing less and even embracing that.

Now, to be fair, when I started thinking about this, I didn't necessarily have less hygiene on the list. But today's guest did. Less showering, to be specific. For me, it's very, very minimal. I don't use any kind of shampoo. I like to wash with water in the morning.

Dr. James Hamblin was a staff writer at The Atlantic when he embarked on this experiment. It was about eight years ago. And in many ways, he was asking the same questions we are asking now. And he was specifically asking, why do we shower so much? And what does it really mean to be clean?

You walk into any pharmacy and next to the cold and flu medications, there are aisles of shampoos and soaps. It just got me thinking, what is this all for? How much of it is necessary for health and how much of this is just a personal preference? And am I wasting time and money? Would I be better off if I did less? These were just questions that I wanted to explore.

The good doctor probably got a much bigger reaction than he expected, because people love their showers, especially in the United States, and they love their products while they are showering. So just sort of rinsing, you're saying. You don't really use...

soap or shampoo, unless there's a particular reason from some obviously dirty, you know, fluid, bodily fluid, whatever type thing. Other than that, you're not going to use those products. Yeah, yeah, no. And besides the products, there is the time. Most of us will spend about 12,167 hours of our lives just washing our bodies. That's about two years of washing if you spend about 20 minutes per day doing it.

So if you could cut down on even part of that daily routine, why not try? Maybe adding more is not the right thing. Maybe gradually doing less would actually work. Today, we continue our series of New Year's anti-resolutions with a new approach to hygiene and why sometimes lathering up may be doing your body more harm than good. I'm Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN's chief medical correspondent, and this is Chasing Life.

Dr. Hamblin is now a lecturer at Yale School of Public Health, and he's written a book, Clean, The New Science of Skin. When he first started his non-showering experiment, he was actually intrigued by what was then a fairly new health trend.

People were suddenly taking probiotics and wanting to have optimal gut flora. This was not something that would be talked about or even conceived of in, say, the 90s by most people. But it had made its way into a way of thinking about gut health. And I saw the same thing potentially happening in skin health because...

You have these trillions of microbes all over you. The skin microbiome is smaller than the gut microbiome, but it's a similar principle that this is something that is with you all the time, these populations, and they're there whether you like it or not. Unless you completely drench yourself in iodine, you're not going to be rid of them. And even if you did that, you would quickly repopulate.

So it got me thinking, what am I even trying to really accomplish when I'm cleaning? Obviously, when you scrub in for surgery, you are trying to get as sterile as possible for that moment before a surgical procedure to avoid contamination. But that's not possible in real life. And you're not even getting sterile in the shower, even when you wash your hands.

um, in a regular way and a non-surgical scrubbing in capacity. So it just got me thinking, what is this all for? How much of it is necessary for health and how much of this is just a

personal preference and am I wasting time and money? Would I be better off if I did less? These are just questions that I wanted to explore. I realize you wrote a whole book about this, but is there a way to summarize how much of what we do from a personal hygiene standpoint is just cultural and personal preference versus actual, you know, objective benefit for health? Almost all of it is cultural, social, psychological, personal preference.

And that is not at all to belittle the importance of it. But you walk into any pharmacy and next to the cold and flu medications, there are aisles of shampoos and soaps. And a lot of them have medical sounding claims about what they're doing for you. And there is a large health halo around these products. And we think of them as hygiene products. And we...

stigmatize people who don't use them and call them disgusting and gross and all kinds of things. But if you look at the actual way in which many of those products are actually doing anything to prevent disease transmission outside of washing your hands and actually making sure you don't have bodily fluids on you or blood or vomit or anything else that might transmit disease, the rest of it is...

making you look and feel and smell good. And these are socially determined standards that we tend to internalize. And they've varied widely, you know, throughout history and globally over time. And right now we're in a very maximalist phase where if you ever go out appearing that you haven't completely cleaned every part of your body within the last 24 hours, you, you know,

you risk being thought of in a negative way. It sort of strikes me when I was reading your book that we do things to disrupt our microbiome and then we try and replenish it, you know, with probiotics and things like that, which, you know, may or may not work. Sometimes there's not a lot of data behind some of those products. Is the thinking sort of the same with the skin microbiome that you might be disrupting it with these products and then trying to replenish it? Yeah. Yeah, exactly. So

There is a harmony between the oils and chemicals that your skin secretes naturally and the skin microbiome that lives on that skin. And you temporarily disrupt the microbiome when you take a hot shower and you use a detergent. But you're also disrupting essentially the soil on which those microbes live by pollinating

drying out your skin and removing all the oils. It's not necessarily bad, but it changes the dynamic. And if you are prone to an inflammatory cascade like happens with eczema or acne, you can be exacerbating it. It's a sort of clear cutting of a forest. It's not always the best approach. And we are just...

scratching the surface, I think, in understanding exactly what that looks like. It is a difficult thing to study, just like the gut microbiome. Do you ever use antibacterial soap? I mean, when you talk about the impact on the microbiome, are there certain soaps that are just going to be worse? Do all soaps sort of affect skin microbiome in the same way? Yeah, well, a soap, by definition, you know, is a very specific product that just removes the

the fats from your skin, the lipid, the oils that are on your skin. So, and then in doing that, it's sort of like taking away the soil from your front lawn. You're going to kill the grass, you know, you're going to remove the grass. It's not actually,

killing the grass itself, but you're removing the substrate, the thing that it grows on. So, you know, that will come back. Your skin will continue to produce oils and microbes will repopulate. And the question is then, well, what effect did that have when you perturb the populations? Which ones grew back quickest in place of what was there? And what sort of cycles are you getting yourself into? But all soaps do is target the lipids to wash them off. And soaps and detergents being

used interchangeably. A lot of liquid soaps are technically detergents, but they're not killing things. And I don't know the utility of any antibacterial soap, again, outside of a context like surgery, where you might be trying to briefly attain some state of being as close to sterile as possible.

Yeah. And you and you make this point in your book as well, that sterility and hygiene are often sort of used interchangeably, but they're not the same thing. Yeah, that's just the thing is, I think without examining like what you're trying to do when you wash, there's a notion you're just taking everything away. And that's good. We'll just get rid of everything and things will be better. But A, you're not doing that because you'd have to completely change.

Soak yourself in something like iodine for a period. And hygiene can help you by removing things like

If there's actual, you've sneezed it, coughed into your hand and there's actually mucus on your hand and you don't want to shake someone else's hand. You, you can wash your hand and get that off of there. So that macroscopic stuff that's going to get washed down the drain in a way that with just water alone, maybe it wouldn't have come off as well. And so it helps in that way, but it's not at a microscopic level, actually like clearing the field. And I don't think that there are many contexts in which you'd,

want that to happen. What is life like for you now with that experience and all that you've learned? I mean, it's a personal question, I guess, but what is your hygiene sort of like? Well, I think part of the reason that people have kind of wild ideas about what is really necessary to health in terms of showering and cleaning ourselves is because it's one of the areas we're still very private about. And there's still a lot of stigma around, you know, people who are perceived to not do enough. And people...

have very strong ideas about what needs to be done when and for what frequency and how long. And if you don't wash this part and this part and this part in this way, then you're doing it wrong. But in truth, it's a very private matter and people have their own feelings about it. And maybe if we just talked more about it, we'd realize that there are many, many different people taking many, many different approaches, many of whom have...

decided to write to me about their practices just because they're kind of like, I thought I was weird. But no, there are lots of different ways to do things correctly. And I think one of the messages I hope from the book is that people feel empowered to do less if it's working for them. If you're happy about the way that you look and feel and you, you know, you're not

causing offense to others with a smell or your appearance, then you can get away with very little. I mean, I know a lot of people who don't use deodorant don't seem to need it. And so, you know, you learn that yourself. If you do what kinds work for you, how often you need to use it, how often you need to bathe and how often you need to use soap and shampoo in that process. It's

Pretty much up to you. For me, it's very minimal. I don't use...

Any kind of shampoo. I like to wash with water in the morning. I found that it just helps me start my day. And I feel like that's a big reason that a lot of people do these things. Either to start or end their day. It's a sort of demarcating ritual of just waking up or shutting down. Or both. Some people do both. And without it, you just don't feel quite like yourself. You don't feel as put together. But you can be fine with what works for you.

For you. Again, assuming you're not causing offense to others and disrupting society. Was that ever a problem? I mean, did people say that you were causing offense? I mean...

No, I never would have let it go that far. And in these things, I seem to work best when people are quitting things like deodorant by doing so gradually, just like anything you would, any change you would make in life. Your body adapts to things slowly. You don't decide you're going to be a runner and go out and run a marathon on day one. You gradually adapt to things. I think oftentimes diets fail because people try to radically overhaul everything they're eating on January 1st.

Instead of gradually saying, okay, well, maybe one meal a week is going to be healthier and two meals and then this. And I think a lot of these changes happen similarly where you just gradually adapt to them. I'd like to shower, especially after I work out. I mean, it's, it's sweat. I mean, you talked about the fact that obviously if you have blood on you or vomit on you, you know, something obvious, definitely shower. What about sweat? Yeah. Yeah.

I ran the New York Marathon and I got done and my face was coated in, because of the weather, it was such that the sweat dried out and I had white sodium caked on my skin. And so obviously, yeah, I want to rinse that off. It feels, it's dry and people were looking at me like, what's that stuff on your face on the subway home? So yeah, but you can get that off really quickly with just water that washes right off very easily. Just water.

Yeah. I mean, the point of soap is if there's something that won't come off, it's, it's an extremely valuable tool. If you have a grease on your hands, if you have really oily skin and it's, but usually it's more, um, the mechanical force that's doing most of the washing. So when you rub your hands together, you're getting underwater, you're getting a lot of that off. The soap takes the extra mile, especially if there's something sticky on your, you know, you've got honey or motor oil on your, on your hands. You need something to

help break that sticky attachment to your skin. But something like sweat will come off with water. All right. So what about you? You going to do less, even shower less after listening to Dr. Hamblin? We're going to take a short break here. But when we come back, transforming your daily hygiene routine. This podcast is supported by Sleep Number.

There's a reason the Sleep Number smart bed is the number one bed for couples. It's because you can each choose what's right for you whenever you like. Firmer or softer on either side, Sleep Number does that. One side cooler and the other side warmer, Sleep Number does that too. You have to feel it to believe it. Only Sleep Number smart beds let you choose your ideal comfort and support, your Sleep Number setting. Sleep Number smart beds learn how you sleep and provide personalized insights to help you sleep better.

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This is All There Is, Season 3. In the past year, I've listened to about 6,000 voicemail messages you've left for me after Season 2 and most of the ones sent in so far this season. When I listen to your messages, it makes me feel less different and alone. My grief is deep and real and it has brought me to my knees. Listen to All There Is with Anderson Cooper wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome back to Chasing Life.

People have talked about this thing known as the hygiene hypothesis, and they've attributed even the increase in allergies, for example, to that. And you've made this point a couple of times, Dr. Hamlin, that some of this is just cultural expectations and practices. But that's also important. Like we evolve. We evolve as human beings on the planet to start doing certain things. And it's okay, I think, as long as there's not evidence of harm to that.

And I think that's where I get hung up a little bit. Like, is it a question of those products causing harm or are we not doing enough to properly repopulate our microbiome by being in the dirt? Yeah. You know, what was known as the hygiene hypothesis, the idea that we might be doing harm to ourselves by too much hygiene, I think has fallen short.

out of favor and been replaced with something called the biodiversity hypothesis, which is to say that we might be not having as much biodiversity on our skin, in our guts,

by way of our exposure and our lifestyle in many, many different ways. Technically hygiene, if you're doing it well, is a very targeted approach to saying, why am I doing this practice? Why am I wearing a face mask right now? Why am I washing my hands right now? I'm washing my hands after I use the bathroom because there's this evidence that we need to do this to remove any possible transmission of microbes that might happen during that time.

But that doesn't mean it's not hygiene to wash your hands every five minutes. There's no evidence that that would make you any healthier or prevent disease transmission. But the biodiversity hypothesis would say, well, just many of us are living...

isolated lives in sterile offices surrounded by the same few people and very few animals and not getting a ton of exposure to the outdoors and not traveling enough and not physically close to many people at all, of getting very little physical contact with people outside of an occasional handshake. And for all these reasons that we might, you know, not have these sorts of

microbial inputs that shape a robust immune system. I think it's just being about being deliberate about what you do. You don't want to encase yourself in a bubble any more than you want to go out and deliberately expose yourself to dangerous situations. You want this balance of exposure and...

And striking that balance is easier said than done for sure. Find that balance. And probably a lot of it is common sense. I mean, not encapsulating yourself in a bubble and not overly, you know, just cleaning yourself all the time. I know you just mentioned you run the New York Marathon. You're out there in, you know, in the environment. Do you have pets there?

I do. I have two big dogs and I have a baby. And I know as a parent, you know, it's very easy to err on the side of just protect, protect, keep everything away, you know, keep that away, you know,

constantly clean the kid you know it's it's just easier and simpler to think let's err on the side of hygiene but exposure is important too you know you are building essentially all these exposures in the same way that you want to expose a kid to arts and music and stories and education but a lot of people don't think that same way about just worldly exposures you know so yeah that's a kid can

pet a dog, if somebody else can, you know, hold your kid and give him a hug, I'm all for it. I think that's a valuable thing in the same way that, you know, trying to keep the kid away from somebody who's sneezing in their face is valuable. You know, in the book, you are pretty clear, you don't want the takeaway to be that people should shower less. What is the takeaway?

I think it sort of comes back to that biodiversity hypothesis that there is a lot of marketing out there in the world of cleanliness and beauty and hygiene products about what this product will do for your health and how it will make you better and more virtuous and how it's necessary and how you're hurting yourself and maybe you're a bad parent if you don't use these things. But

In fact, there are a lot of ways to do things correctly. And there's very little that is necessary for disease transmission prevention. And so if something is working for you, it makes you happy, you enjoy it, you enjoy the process, you enjoy the product, you like the look of the product, the smell of it, you enjoy applying it and using it.

then great. And it's part of your cultural practice. You know, all these things are great. And I would never tell anyone to give up something that they're enjoying. But there is a large segment of the population also that's doing things just because they thought it was necessary because they were sold something by marketing because they think it's making them healthier in some vague way, even though it's annoying and expensive and maybe it dries their skin out. And I don't know. And if people could have the freedom, just feel free to just let that go. Try going without it. Try doing less. And that would be great.

A lot of people make resolutions this time of year. Do you make resolutions? Is that a thing for you? I don't because if I decide I'm going to do something, it's really hard for me to say, I'll wait until January 1st to start that. So I'll just start it right away. But yeah, if people are looking for resolutions, you know, just oftentimes the natural inclination in our society is add another product, do more, do more, do more. And

You know, I think the interesting suggestion is at least to think, well, maybe adding more is not is not the right thing. Maybe maybe gradually doing less would actually work. I'm going to take your advice, doctor. I really am. I actually started taking your advice already, to be honest, and I really appreciate it. Oh, yeah. You, too. This has been a real pleasure. Thank you. Such an interesting guy. That was Dr. James Hamlin. He's a doctor and a public policy lecturer at Yale University.

gave me a lot to think about. How much of what we do is because of expectations? Expectations that are often created, by the way, for one primary reason, which is to sell you another product.

Today we talked about hygiene, and that's very tangible. But there are so many examples of this throughout our lives. Where we do too much, where we use too much, buy too much. And many times, we don't really need to do it. And as Dr. Hamblin points out, sometimes those things can even hurt us. So just take the extra beat and give it a thought. Do you really need to do what you're about to do?

That's all for today's show. If you missed any of our other episodes focused on doing less in the new year, consider giving them a listen. Whether you're interested in releasing yourself from the pressure to be perfect or even the benefits of boredom. Thanks so much for listening.

Chasing Life is a production of CNN Audio. Our podcast is produced by Aaron Mathewson, Jennifer Lai, Grace Walker, Lori Gallaretta, Jesse Remedios, Sophia Sanchez, and Kira Dering. Andrea Kane is our medical writer. Our senior producer is Dan Bloom. Amanda Seeley is our showrunner. Dan DeZula is our technical director. And the executive producer of CNN Audio is Steve Liktai.

With support from Jamis Andrest, John D'Onora, Haley Thomas, Alex Manasseri, Robert Mathers, Laini Steinhardt, Nicole Pesereau, and Lisa Namarau. Special thanks to Ben Tinker and Nadia Kanang of CNN Health and Katie Hinman.

There's a reason the Sleep Number smart bed is the number one best bed for couples. It's because you can each choose what's right for you whenever you like. Firmer or softer on either side, Sleep Number does that. One side cooler and the other side warmer, Sleep Number does that too. You have to feel it to believe it. Sleep better together. And now save 50% on the new Sleep Number limited edition smart bed. Limited time. Exclusively at a Sleep Number store near you.

See store or sleepnumber.com for details.

This week on The Assignment with me, Adi Cornish. The truth is that many of us warned about this. Reverend Gabriel Salguero, pastor of The Gathering Place in Orlando, Florida. What are the kinds of messages you have been getting? I got a call from somebody saying that they're not going to go to church because they're afraid. Many pastors are concerned that it will impinge on our religious liberty to serve immigrant communities and mixed status communities. What does it feel like to be on the front lines of the immigration debates?

Listen to The Assignment with me, Audie Cornish, streaming now on your favorite podcast app.