ZOE Science & Nutrition

5 ways relationships change your gut health | Prof Tim Spector

49 snips
Feb 5, 2026
Prof Tim Spector, epidemiologist and leading gut microbiome scientist, explains how microbes travel between people, homes and environments. He explores birth and early-life seeding, how families and partners swap strains, the effects of antibiotics and cleanliness, and why pets, gardening and social contact shape long-term gut diversity.
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ADVICE

Prefer Natural Birth And Breastfeeding When Possible

  • Doctors generally avoid intentionally seeding C-section babies with maternal swabs due to infection concerns and inconclusive benefit evidence.
  • Consider breastfeeding and natural birth when possible, as they most support early microbiome development.
INSIGHT

Mouth Bacteria Spread Easily, Gut Bacteria Need Closeness

  • Oral microbes spread widely through everyday interactions like talking and spitting micro-doses of saliva.
  • Gut microbes require closer, often intimate contact to transfer and occupy the anaerobic gut niche.
INSIGHT

Cohabitation Beats Genetics For Microbial Sharing

  • Physical closeness and cohabitation shape gut microbiome similarity more than genetics.
  • Couples sharing a bed exchange more strains than identical twins living apart.
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