Are modern habits around cleanliness, parenting, and social contact shaping your gut health more than you realise?
In this episode, Professor Tim Spector explains how gut microbes are shared between people - through relationships, daily contact, and the environments we live in, and why this matters for long-term health. You’ll learn how human contact may be influencing your gut in ways most of us never consider.
Tim explains why supporting gut microbiome is less about control and more about balance, and you’ll learn simple ways to support a healthier gut through food, social connection and lifestyle habits.
If your gut reflects the people you live with and the places you spend time, what small change could you make this week - in your home, your habits, or your social life - that might support your gut for the long term?
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Timecodes
00:00 Intro
04:12 Why birth is designed to be messy
08:32 Why your first microbes shape everything later
10:46 Can you replace microbes after a C-section?
13:05 Why the first few years matter more than the rest
15:54 Why antibiotics always come with a hidden cost
17:42 How families swap microbes without realising
19:06 Why microbes survive in some places — and not others
21:25 Why bigger social groups protect your immune system
22:30 How scientists can tell who you live with
24:15 Why closeness matters more than genetics
25:38 Can you catch bad gut bugs from other people?
26:29 Can anxiety spread through gut microbes?
27:55 How scientists now rank “good” and “bad” gut bugs
31:05 Why countryside living changes your gut health
33:49 Why getting dirty may improve mental health
35:33 Why sterilising everything can backfire
38:05 Why pets — especially dogs — boost gut health
42:18 Can your partner improve your health without dieting?
43:25 Why loneliness harms your gut microbiome
45:25 The shared habit of long-living communities
52:01 Why fighting germs may be harming your health
📚Books by our ZOE Scientists
The Food For Life Cookbook
Every Body Should Know This by Dr Federica Amati
Food For Life by Prof. Tim Spector
Ferment by Prof. Tim Spector
Free resources from ZOE
Eating for Better Brain Health: Your brain-gut blueprint
How to eat in 2026 - Discover ZOE’s 8 nutrition principles for long-term health
Live Healthier: Top 10 Tips From ZOE Science & Nutrition
Gut Guide - For a Healthier Microbiome in Weeks
Better Breakfast Guide
Mentioned in today's episode
5 daily habits of people who live longer | Dan Buettner
Risk of Asthma and Allergies in Children Delivered by Cesarean Section, The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (2024)
Can maternal-child microbial seeding interventions improve the health of infants delivered by Cesarean section?, Cell (2022)
Dietary Exposure to Antibiotic Residues, Frontiers (2022)
The person-to-person transmission landscape of the gut and oral microbiomes, Nature (2023)
Gut micro-organisms associated with health, nutrition and dietary interventions, Nature (2025)
Intergenerational transmission of diet-induced obesity, A&R (2021)
The indoors microbiome and human health, Nature Reviews Microbiology (2024)
Cohabiting family members share microbiota with one another and with their dogs, Microbiology and Infectious Disease (2013)
Rural and urban microbiota, Gut Microbes (2014)
Infant pacifier sanitization and risk, Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (2021)
Have feedback or a topic you'd like us to cover? Let us know here.
Episode transcripts are available here.