Colon cancer rates are rising among those under 50, with expert James Kinross highlighting poor gut health as a contributor. The gut microbiome, crucial for health, is adversely affected by urban lifestyles leading to reduced diversity. Kinross ties environmental factors and dietary choices to this decline, which can raise colon cancer risks. However, he notes the gut microbiome is adaptable, and people's choices, like limited antibiotic use, can enhance its diversity and potentially lower the risk of colon cancer.
You're seeing a generational loss in our internal ecology, which is being hammered with a series of environmental hits that it simply cannot adapt to.
It is an ecosystem which you can adapt, and you can modify.
In my house, to qualify for antibiotics, you've really got to have a pathogen that you need treated.
Research suggests the gut microbiome... has a wide-ranging effect on our health.
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