"It’s Just a Never-Ending Battle": The Role of Modern Hygiene Ideals and the Dynamics of Everyday Life in Constructing Indoor Ecologies
Date
Authors
Wakefield-Rann, Rachael
Fam, Dena
Stewart, Susan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ANU Press
Abstract
Recent research suggests that the greatest threat to children’s health from home
environments across much of the industrialized world may no longer be pathogenic
microbes, but impoverished microbial communities and the chemicals used in
everyday products, including those for cleaning. This paper proposes that concepts
of hygiene should be updated, given this reorientation of harm. However, little
research has been conducted, which a) integrates knowledge from the diverse
disciplinary fields concerned with indoor environments (such as microbiology,
chemistry, and design), and b) examines how individuals conceptualize and enact
hygiene to create healthier indoor environments for their families, including the
extent to which their practices achieve this.
To gain insight into factors influencing how hygiene is enacted in the home, as well
as the consequent effects on the composition of indoor environments, it is necessary
to transgress traditional disciplinary approaches to investigate indoor environmental
health and integrate knowledge from experts and lay people who inhabit these
spaces. To do this, recent scientific and design literature addressing key determinants
of environmental health in homes are consulted. This is combined with qualitative
research into the ways in which parents define, perform, and measure hygiene within domestic spaces. The data collected concerns homes in Sydney, Australia,
with the findings showing that common hygiene practices with potentially harmful
outcomes often emerge from compromises between competing priorities within
complexes of home practices. Factors influencing the dynamics that determine
which activities are prioritized and how they are performed are dually highlighted.
Some notable factors include confusion and uncertainty associated with the sensory
proxies used to determine cleanliness and risk of harm, increased sensitivity to the
potential presence of microbes over other potentially harmful microspecies, and
the health histories and experiences of parents and children.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Human Ecology Review
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access via publisher website
License Rights
Creative Commons licence (CC BY-NC-ND; creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)