catjac1975
Garden Master
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I think it is more about basic cleanliness than anything else. Before germs were discovered people did not even know the basic importance of hand washing. Babies and Mothers died in childbirth from infection more than anything. Infants died of dysentery. And then of course later in life, diseases from which now antibiotics save people every day. Though modern medicine has in many cases gone to extremes, how many of us would be here without fever reducers and antibiotics?
digitS' said:I have been thinking about how loss of babies during the 19th century may relate to diet. Mickey brings up a very interesting point: the nutrition of the mothers. Here is a little something from the agricultural statisticians of the mid-20th century:Mickey328 said:That's one thing that has definitely changed from last century...infant/child mortality. Personally, I think much of it had to do with the mother's resources just being depleted, giving rise to babies who were more susceptible to lots of things going around. . . .
"The consumption of tomatoes and citrus fruit, important sources of ascorbic acid, increased gradually since 1909, but in the past 10 years the rise has been spectacular. In 1945 the average civilian consumed 116 pounds, compared to about 45 pounds in 1909. . . . Leafy, green, and yellow vegetables form another group that has gained importance in our national diet. From 1909 to 1913, annual consumption averaged about 74 pounds a person. Twenty years later it had increased to about 90 pounds. From 1941 to 1945 we had 121 pounds for each person, or nearly 65 percent more than the consumption from 1909 to 1913." Yearbook of Agriculture 1943-1947 (link)
Wow! From 45#/person to 116#/person and from 74#/person to 121#/person! Taken together: 237 - 119 = 118. Okay, if that was representative of all fruits and vegetables it would be a 100% increase in consumption!
Historian and anthropologists note the heavily weighted importance of meat and cereal grains in the diets of Americans 100 and 200 years ago. This looks like fairly strong confirmation of that.
Burt Wolf had a fun PBS show on a changing American diet. Here is something online about that, what Burt called "How Italians Saved American Cooking!" That part is about one-half way thru this 5 page pdf file (link).
Steve http://i60.photobucket.com/albums/h22/Digit_007/Just 4 Fun/1sm209yum1.gif