How the Mid-Victorians Worked, Ate and Died
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. How the Mid-Victorians Worked
3. What the Mid-Victorians Ate
Vegetables, Green and Root
Fruit
Legumes and Nuts
Fish and Seafoods
Meats
Eggs and Dairy Products
Alcohol
Tobacco
Adulterants
Dietary Summary
4. How the Mid-Victorians Died
Public Health Patterns
- Infection including TB and other lung infections such as pneumonia; epidemics (scarlet fever, smallpox, influenza, typhoid, cholera etc), with spread often linked to poor sanitation: and the sexually transmitted diseases.
- Accidents/trauma linked to work place and domestic conditions. Death from burns was an important cause of death among women, due largely to a combination of open hearth cooking, fashions in dress, and the use of highly flammable fabrics.
- Infant/mother mortality [66]. This was generally due to infection, although maternal haemorrhage was another significant causative factor.
- Heart failure. This was generally due to damage to the heart valves caused by rheumatic fever, and was not a degenerative disease. Angina pectoris does not appear in the registrar general’s records as a cause of death until 1857 – and then as a disease of old age - although the diagnosis and its causes were recognised [67–70].
- 5. Coronary artery disease (see above)
- 6. Paralytic fits (strokes, see Webster’s Dictionary). Stroke was mainly associated with the middle and upper classes who ate a diet in which animal derived foods had a more significant role, and who consumed as a result rather less fruits and vegetables. Strokes were generally non-fatal, at least the first time; although mortality rates increased with each subsequent stroke [65]
- 7. Cancers were relatively rare [65]. While the Victorians did not possess sophisticated diagnostic or screening technology, they were as able to diagnose late stage cancer as we are today; but this was an uncommon finding. In that period, cancer carried none of the stigma that it has recently acquired, and was diagnosed without bias. For example, in 1869 the Physician to Charing Cross Hospital describes lung cancer as ‘… one of the rarer forms of a rare disease. You may probably pass the rest of your students life without seeing another example of it.’ [71].
5. What Did the Victorians Ever Do for Us?
- Degenerative diseases are not caused by old age (the ‘wear and tear’ hypothesis); but are driven, in the main, by chronic malnutrition. Our low energy lifestyles leave us depleted in anabolic and anti-catabolic co-factors; and this imbalance is compounded by excessive intakes of inflammatory compounds. The current epidemic of degenerative disease is caused by widespread problem of multiple micro- and phyto-nutrient depletion (Type B malnutrition.)
- With the exception of family planning and antibiotics, the vast edifice of twentieth century healthcare has generated little more than tools to suppress symptoms of the degenerative diseases which have emerged due to our failure to maintain mid-Victorian nutritional standards.
- The only way to combat the adverse effects of Type B malnutrition, and to prevent and / or cure degenerative disease, is to enhance the nutrient density of the modern diet.
6. The Case for Supplements
7. Final Comment
References and Notes
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Clayton, P.; Rowbotham, J. How the Mid-Victorians Worked, Ate and Died. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2009, 6, 1235-1253. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph6031235
Clayton P, Rowbotham J. How the Mid-Victorians Worked, Ate and Died. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2009; 6(3):1235-1253. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph6031235
Chicago/Turabian StyleClayton, Paul, and Judith Rowbotham. 2009. "How the Mid-Victorians Worked, Ate and Died" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 6, no. 3: 1235-1253. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph6031235
APA StyleClayton, P., & Rowbotham, J. (2009). How the Mid-Victorians Worked, Ate and Died. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 6(3), 1235-1253. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph6031235