The Arizona Republic

Study: Feeling disgusted could be good for your health

- Christine Clarridge

SEATTLE – Eww, gross!

There’s no need to feel there’s something wrong with you if you recoil when foodie friends talk about the interestin­g delicacies they’ve tried: still-beating cobra hearts, soft-boiled fetal duck or even the more banal chocolate-covered crickets.

And you don’t need to change — in fact, these reactions could keep you healthy.

Disgust, it turns out, is good for you, according to a new study published last week in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences that suggests revulsion could be the body’s way of avoiding infection.

The idea is not new: Charles Darwin hypothesiz­ed that humans evolved a sense of disgust to help avoid tainted food, but this is the first study to have directly tested whether greater pathogen disgust sensitivit­y is associated with fewer current infections, according to a Washington State University writeup on the study.

Aaron D. Blackwell, an associate professor of anthropolo­gy at WSU and coauthor of the study, said participan­ts from three indigenous Ecuadorian Shuar communitie­s were asked to rate their level of disgust on things like touching a dead animal, stepping in animal droppings or drinking a fermented corn drink, chicha, made in this instance by someone with rotten teeth chewing the corn and spitting it into water to let it ferment.

“The higher the level of disgust, the lower the level of their inflammato­ry biomarkers indicative of infections,” he said. “While the study shows that disgust functions to protect against infection, it also showed it varies across different environmen­ts, based on how easily people can avoid certain things.”

Blackwell, along with a research team led by Tara Cepon-Robins of University Colorado Colorado Springs also found that levels of disgust went up when people had access to fresh water and purchased food and could afford to avoid disgusting things.

But in the communitie­s that relied more heavily on subsistenc­e activities like hunting and small-scale agricultur­e, there were lower levels of disgust.

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