For the sake of our health, we need to kick the indoor habit

As a species we need to get out more. Humans now spend so
much time indoors that many of us are cultivating a variety of serious health
complaints, and for some they could be fatal. It is not so much that outdoor
time is inherently good; more that our bodies are built to anticipate it and
the way we live now is confusing to our systems. Nearly two decades ago a study
published in Nature magazine concluded that the average American spent 93% of
their time indoors. And that was before tablets and smartphones.
In trying to cope with the shaded, sedentary world we have
made, our bodies wage war on what should be harmless antigens; they fail to
make bones strong enough to support our weight; even our eyes struggle to focus
without the help of lenses. This incremental creep across the threshold to the
great indoors began tens of thousands of years ago when the first settled
communities emerged.
As our shelters have become larger and sturdier, the time
that we spend in them has extended. And we are only just beginning to
understand the number of health risks that are associated with living a
permanently sheltered life. Take shortsightedness, which is a growing problem
among the young, particularly in south-east Asia. Almost everyone believes that
close work (reading, phone use, too much TV) plays a part. And, because the
condition is more common in certain populations, coupled with the fact that
parents seem likely to pass the condition on, many also believe that it is
hereditary. While both assumptions are not wrong, they are a long way from
telling the whole story.
In Singapore, for example, where I went with the BBC to make
one of a series of programmes about how modern life is changing our bodies,
myopia affects 85% of young people. The fact that only 30% of the older
generation are shortsighted suggests that the current spike is not being driven
by inherited genes.
To grow to its optimum shape, a developing eye needs
exposure to good quality light, which can’t be found indoors. In Singapore,
there are virtually no houses with gardens where children can play – only tower
blocks. Even if they wanted to play outside, a hyper-competitive educational
environment means that children are often buried under academic work. The city
boasts miles of subterranean outlets that interconnect between main streets.
All of which contribute to children’s exposure to artificial light.
Our indoor habits are so ingrained that many of us are also
not getting enough vitamin D. To make bone, we need calcium and phosphorous,
but calcium in particular is difficult for the body to absorb without vitamin
D. Although we can get some vitamin D through our diet, most of it is made by
our skin on exposure to sunlight. There have been a number of infant deaths
caused by vitamin D deficiency in Britain in recent years.
Research is also showing that vitamin D deficiency is
increasingly linked with the prevalence of allergies. An allergic reaction is
an inappropriate immune response (itching, swelling, anaphylaxis) to an
otherwise harmless substance. With every generation since the 19th century, the
number of children with allergies has seemingly increased exponentially.
Asthma, for example, was practically unheard of 200 years ago, but today it
accounts for 1,200 deaths a year in the UK.
Studies contrasting rural and modern populations have shown
that exposure to “natural environments” may reduce allergy risks by more than
90%. Historically, these figures make sense. Hay fever, when it began in the
19th century, was associated either with the bookish or the well-to-do, being
two groups who spent little time working the fields. The second wave of
allergic disease is food allergy. Research in Australia suggests that vitamin D
deficiency is linked to an elevenfold increase in the likelihood of peanut
allergy (and a tripling of the prevalence of egg allergy).
Around the world, various solutions are being sought with
varying degrees of success. In China, there have been rather sketchy
experiments with glass classrooms (they failed because everyone cooked in the
heat). In Singapore, schools are introducing a variety of measures specifically
to improve children’s exposure to sunlight. In some, playtimes are now of a
greater length and frequency, lessons are deliberately timetabled so that
students are required to walk longer distances between class. The experiments
also have additional benefits such as curtailing children’s gadget time while
building social engagement.
A smartwatch is being trialled for children in Singapore,
which as well as tracking activity also calculates minutes of exposure to good
quality light. The watches are collecting masses of data that in a few years’
time will prove invaluable in determining the ideal light diet for children
throughout the world.
Our DNA does not expect us to be out hunting all day on the
savannah. But what began with a few branches as an easy solution for settling
in one place has since ballooned into a total shade-binge. If urban planning
for the future is to succeed it needs to take into account everything that
humans need: not just food, water and shelter, but sunlight, too.
The causes of our modern maladies are complex. But the
uncomfortable truth is that too many of them are all finding their feet in the
perennial shade afforded by our 21st-century lifestyles.