The National Malnutrition
By D. T. Quigley, M. D. and F. A. C. S.
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The National Malnutrition - D. T. Quigley
Angelis
INTRODUCTION
Since the first use of the word vitamin
the problem of nutrition has been more or less confused. With the discovery of new vitamins confusion increased. When minerals were added to the necessary articles required for good nutrition the bungling and muddling connected with pontifical pronouncements from supposed high places made it more difficult for anyone, doctor or layman, to get at the truth. The matter would not have been so hard to untangle had not the whole question been saturated with the poison of commercialism. The selling of bad food had become one of the biggest if not actually the biggest of business enterprises. The usual scientific discussions which always follow the introduction of new ideas in medicine were not allowed to proceed as usual in an unbiased way, but commercial interests began in a most insidious way to combat scientific fact with ridicule, endowed research (endowed in one direction), and other well tried and tested methods. As the purveyors of good food were practically unorganized and had smaller investments, errors were allowed to go unchallenged, the general confusion on the subject of nutrition increased and the sabotage on the health and well being of the American people proceeded apace. Under the stress of war the will to better health has been developed. The bad qualities of certain foods were admitted. It was conceded that white flour and sugar were producers of the most dangerous diseases. An unsatisfactory compromise was made and the false statements foisted on the people to allay general unrest. In effect the bad food purveyors now said: our product was bad but now it is good. As a matter of fact white flour has been improved very little, sugar not at all and canned goods have the same reduced amounts of vitamin B that they always had, (the B largely killed by heat).
The only good flour is whole grain flour and as this must be fresh, (it spoils in a few weeks) the white flour milling business would be affected in an adverse way if fresh whole wheat flour were to become universally used.
In human nutrition we must aim at the optimum as in the inevitable national conflicts which test the highest in physical and mental development, only the optimum will prevail. The profit minded individual who prates about the American diet being satisfactory as it is, digs his own grave as he opens the way for our enemies.
CHAPTER I
OUR DIETARY NEEDS (What do we need?)
The requirements for the maintenance of life in every living cell are to be obtained partly from the air we breathe, partly from the water we drink, and partly from the food we eat. There is the possibility of variations or changes in any of these three which may inhibit the optimum life processes in the living cells. Air may be contaminated with smoke or gas or dust. Water may be contaminated with typhoid fever germs or amebic dysentery. Food may be contaminated with disease germs, or may fail to contain the necessary elements for providing the highest type of resistance to disease germs.
In the life of the ordinary person, the most common disease-producing factors are from food deficiencies. In the past it has been thought that contaminated air and water have a good deal to do with the production of disease, and while this does occasionally occur, it is not to be compared in importance with the amount of disease that is produced by errors in diet.
In the past, before dietary principles were on a scientific basis, much theorizing was done as to the cause of some of the common diseases. Philosophical methods of thought ascribed disease to air, water, weather, evil spirits, changes in the moon, cold, wet, and witchcraft. Today we know that the average healthy animal will live out his life free from disease, retaining mental and physical faculties until near the time that death comes from old age, if the individual is properly nourished. These principles have been worked out on laboratory animals, and are now well established. The application to human individuals is much more difficult than to laboratory animals, but by accident or design, much evidence has been accumulated on individual human beings and in groups, in factories, armies, and persons in certain geographical locations.
The Japanese Army during the Russian-Japanese war suffered in a very great way from a deficiency disease. The Japanese Navy during the same war, properly fed, suffered very little from this disease. Some industrial plants have experimented with employees in the matter of a tendency to catch cold, and have found that the well-nourished individuals have a much smaller number of days absent from work on this account. The people of Labrador every winter suffer severely from scurvy and beriberi due to the fact that during this period of the year they are located in a somewhat inaccessible geographical location, and fresh fruits and vegetables are not available.
These instances are given to show the methods used to acquire information in connection with the human animal, and in order to show that in the main the principles that apply to rats and guinea pigs apply in the same way to humans.
A few of the sources of information in connection with human diets are studies made in the Loetschental valley in Switzerland, the Outer Hebrides Islands and the Indians of western Canada. These relatively inaccessible geographic locations permit the study of peoples who live on natural foods. Western Canada, in the region east of the Rocky Mountains, is hard to reach. The Indians in this part of Canada enjoyed long life and good health until a fort was established by the British government. The Indians who lived near the fort found they could trade their furs and fish for the white man's food.
The white man's food
consisted mostly of white flour and sugar. The Indians took to this with as great enthusiasm as they did to alcohol; resulting in many cases of arthritis, tuberculosis, and tooth decay, with a shortened life period, and with lessened ability to work. The Indians in the back country who did not have access to the white man's food kept their good health; had no tuberculosis or any of the other diseases mentioned.
In the Outer Hebrides — a little group of Islands in the north Atlantic west of northern Scotland — the natives were found to be healthy, strong, and long-lived. Their food was whole grain products, milk, milk products, and meat. There was no need for a doctor or a dentist. In time the Lewis tweeds from the Island of Lewis in that group came to be an important article of commerce. A brisk shipping between Scotland and the capital of the Islands sprang up. This shipping brought the English and Scotch, who in turn brought marmalade and other sweets, candies, cookies, and products made with white flour and sugar. Coincident with the introduction of these foods, the school children showed a large incidence of tooth decay, adenoids, diseased tonsils, arthritis, tuberculosis, and other diseases that go with deficiency diets. The people in the back part of the Island of Lewis and the people of the other islands who were not exposed to the diets of the more highly civilized English and Scotch suffered no deficiency disease. They continued to live to be near one hundred years of age without tuberculosis, arthritis, heart disease, diseases of digestion, or tooth decay.
The Loetschental valley in Switzerland is high in the Alps and is relatively inaccessible. The population of the valley is around 2200. The summer is short, but is long enough to provide for a crop of grass, greens, and vegetables. The people of the valley live on milk, cheese, butter, whole grains, eggs and meat. Neither the Indians of western Canada, the people of the Outer Hebrides, or the inhabitants of the Loetschental valley ever had the benefits (or curse) of sugar. This Swiss valley, while supporting a rich and prosperous population, has never had a doctor or a dentist. There has been no need for either. The expected life period is around one hundred years. The persons are vigorous and well able to do manual work in the 80's and 90's. Deficiency diseases as we know them simply do not exist. The Swiss Guard which formerly was furnished to the Pope, and for which the Swiss government searches the country for the finest physical specimens, was largely taken from this valley.
The foregoing are given as illustrations in the human family which might in some measure parallel laboratory experiments made on animals. A larger and more convincing exhibit could be adduced from the experience of the Chinese, Japanese, and Filipinos in connection with polished rice. The eating of polished rice produced hundreds of thousands of cases of beriberi — a disease which paralyzes certain muscle groups, and in some cases produces insanity, and always leads to death. Our own southern states, southern Spain, Italy, and other Mediterranean areas furnished thousands of cases of a disease called pellagra. Persons affected with pellagra have red discoloration of the skin, with disturbances of digestion, and nervousness which finally becomes insanity. In the insane asylums of the southern states, over half of the inmates are there as the result of pellagra. Pellagra has been