Are beards good for your health?

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Source: BBC

If you were in search of a new, disease-fighting antibiotic, where might you start? In a swamp? A remote island? Well, how about combing beards? Michael Mosley investigates.

On Trust Me I’m a Doctor we do experiments which sometimes throw up genuinely new science. In a previous series, for example, we discovered you can cut the calories in pasta by cooking, cooling and then reheating it.

That was a very pleasing result. But our most recent discovery, finding bacteria which appear to be producing a novel form of antibiotic, feels altogether more significant. What was particularly delightful was that they were found growing in someone’s beard.

Beards, as you may have noticed, are back. The chin-strap, the goatee, the neck beard and the Van Dyke, they all have their fans. But with beards sprouting everywhere, like new grass in the spring sunshine, there has inevitably been a backlash.

Critics claim that beards are not only an irritating affectation but can potentially harbour unpleasant bugs.

So, what’s the evidence that beards pose any sort of health risk? Pogonophobes, people who fear beards, had those fears confirmed by a recent study in New Mexico where they found traces of enteric bacteria, the sort usually found in faeces, in randomly sampled beards.

As one newspaper put it: ‘”Some beards contain more poo than a toilet.”

But is this typical? A recent and rather more scientific study, carried in an American hospital, came to very different conclusions.


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In this study, published in the Journal of Hospital Infection, they swabbed the faces of 408 hospital staff with and without facial hair.

They had good reasons for doing so. We know that hospital-acquired infections are a major cause of disease and death in hospitals, with many patients acquiring an infection they didn’t have when they went in. Hands, white coats, ties and equipment have all been blamed, but what about beards?

Well, the researchers were surprised to find that it was the clean-shaven staff, and not the beardies, who were more likely to be carrying something unpleasant on their faces.

The beardless group were more than three times as likely to be harbouring a species known as methicillin-resistant staph aureus on their freshly shaven cheeks. MRSA is a particularly common and troublesome source of hospital-acquired infections because it is resistant to so many of our current antibiotics.

Man combing a beardImage copyrightiStock

So what’s going on? The researchers suggested that shaving might cause micro-abrasions in the skin “which may support bacterial colonisation and proliferation”.

Perhaps. But there was another more plausible explanation staring them in the face. That beards fight infection.

Unlikely? Well, driven by curiosity we recently swabbed the beards of a random assortment of men and sent them off to Dr Adam Roberts, a microbiologist based at University College London, to see what, if anything, he could grow.

Adam managed to grow over 100 different bacteria from our beards, including one that is more commonly found in the small intestine. But, as he quickly explains, that doesn’t mean it came from faeces. Such findings are normal and nothing to worry about.


A brief history of beards

Detail from School of Athens by RaphaelImage copyrightAlamy
  • Alexander the Great reportedly banned his soldiers from growing beards, for fear that enemies would hold on to them in battle as they killed them
  • Hadrian (76-138AD) was apparently the first Roman emperor to grow a beard
  • At 17ft 6in long, Hans Langseth’s beard may have been the longest ever – after his death it was donated to the Smithsonian in Washington DC
  • Beards were compulsory in Afghanistan under the Taliban – they were banned by Albania’s communist leader Enver Hoxha (1908-1985), and more recently for a while in Turkmenistan

Far more interesting, in a few of the petri dishes he noticed that something was clearly killing the other bacteria. The most obvious suspect was a fellow microbe.

We see microbes as our enemy, but they clearly don’t see us that way. Down at their level bacteria and fungi spend their time competing with each other. They fight for food, resources and space. By doing so, over millennia, they have evolved some of the most sophisticated weapons known to microbe-kind – antibiotics.

Penicillin was originally extracted from Penicillium notatum, a species of fungus. The microbe-killing properties of this fungus were discovered by Alexander Fleming when he noticed that a fungus spore, which had accidently blown into his lab from researchers further down the corridor, had killed some bacteria he was growing on a petri dish.

Macrophotograph of a petri dish culture of the fungus Penicillium notatum growing on Whickerham's agarImage copyrightScience Photo Library
Image captionThe fungus Penicillium notatum – is there something similar in beards?

So could our mysterious microbes be doing something similar? Killing fellow bacteria by producing some sort of toxin?

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Categories: Biology, The Muslim Times

2 replies

  1. Men’s beard and Burqa are the ancient Arab tradition, that is not Islamic teaching. At the time of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) people did not have special knife to shave their beard, hair etc. There were no paper to write Allah’s words. All verse were written in animal skin and stone. Can you imagine that?

    Even though Prophet and his companions had beard and long hair, and women covered their the whole body with animal skin cloth but it was not mandatory, it is not Syariah laws, it is the ancient Arab tradition.

    Was Salam

  2. Peace be on all.
    Allah has made some differences in appearances of men and women. Within the limits of bestowed things, if both gender keep their bodies clean and take care if helps vastly to both groups.

    Men are given beards. If they take good care of these hairs, it is nice.

    In the time of Holy Prophet (s.a.w.) men whether believers or non believers grew beards.

    According to Holy Quran, Holy Prophet (s.a.w.) is best model for Muslims.
    It means physically and spiritually. A part of the model is to have beard.

    When Holy Prophet (s.a.w.) saw that the pagans grew both their beards and their mustaches long, he (s.a.w.) said to the believers:
    “Differ from the polytheists: let your beards (grow), and shave your moustache.”
    [ al-Bukhari and Muslim ]

    Latter when Western glitter too over, people began to shave beards.

    One of Latter-days’ sign is men will begin to copy women:
    “”Another change described by the Holy Prophet is that men would take pains over their appearance and tend to look like women. The change is already apparent. Shaving of chin and lips is now the fashion and this has made men look more like women. Time was when the beard was thought to be a male’s glory. For Muslims, it was a thing of merit, because it was an imitation of the Holy Prophet, a sign of deference to his wish. The beard has disappeared amongst Muslims. Muslim scholars and philosophers held in great esteem in the Muslim world prefer to shave their chins…..””
    Ref:https://www.alislam.org/books/invitation/arg2.html

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