Posted on 07/24/2021 6:16:46 AM PDT by Qiviut
Abstract: Analysis of the mid-Victorian period in the U.K. reveals that life expectancy at age 5 was as good or better than exists today, and the incidence of degenerative disease was 10% of ours. Their levels of physical activity and hence calorific intakes were approximately twice ours. They had relatively little access to alcohol and tobacco; and due to their correspondingly high intake of fruits, whole grains, oily fish and vegetables, they consumed levels of micro- and phytonutrients at approximately ten times the levels considered normal today. This paper relates the nutritional status of the mid-Victorians to their freedom from degenerative disease; and extrapolates recommendations for the cost-effective improvement of public health today.
1. Introduction (partial) The mid-Victorian period is usually defined as the years between 1850 and 1870, but in nutritional terms we have identified a slightly longer period, lasting until around 1880. During these 30 years, we argue here, a generation grew up with probably the best standards of health ever enjoyed by a modern state. The British population had risen significantly and had become increasingly urbanised, but the great public health movement had not yet been established and Britain’s towns and cities were still notoriously unhealthy environments [4,5]. Despite this, and contrary to historical tradition, we argue in this paper, using a range of historical evidence, which Britain and its world-dominating empire were supported by a workforce, an army and a navy comprised of individuals who were healthier, fitter and stronger than we are today. They were almost entirely free of the degenerative diseases which maim and kill so many of us, and although it is commonly stated that this is because they all died young, the reverse is true; public records reveal that they lived as long – or longer – than we do in the 21st century. These findings are remarkable, as this brief period of great good health predates not only the public health movement but also the great 20th century medical advances in surgery, infection control and drugs [6–8]. They are also in marked contrast to popular views about Victorian squalor and disease, views that have long obscured the realities of life and death during that ‘period of equipoise’ [9]. Our recent research indicates that the mid-Victorians’ good health was entirely due to their superior diet. This period was, nutritionally speaking, an island in time; one that was created and subsequently squandered by economic and political forces. This begs a series of questions. How did this brief nutritional ‘golden age’ come about? How was it lost? And could we recreate it?
Thanks for posting, it was very interesting reading.
Mrs AV
because everyone’s a millionaire
Yes. Horses are very dangerous.
Most of England is close to water. If not a river, then the coast.
As for rural areas, you are making my case.
Notice all diseases in 1880 were more common causes of death than cancers and diseases of the circulatory system (which would include heart attacks). "Other diseases" is almost 50% in 1880.
It is exactly as I would expect for people who had to do hard, physical work: There cardio-vascular system was in better shape.
It also makes sense from people who died younger, of other diseases, infections, parasites and trauma: they did not live long enough to develop cancers.
There is no data in the chart for trauma from accidents. Accidents are not a disease. The authors of the paper label the chart "Causes of Death".
But, they leave out important causes of death by accident and trauma.
Very likely, the trauma deaths are on another chart, which they did not include.
The chart is from the paper. The authors list where it was obtained.
So despite all the rampant carnage sweeping through Victorian era farms, and rabid horses stomping Brits to death en masse, and hordes of drowning Limeys swept out to sea, English longevity rivaled Methuselah.
I say, old boy, good show!
Please explain.
I am unable to follow your argument.
I do not see any evidence of age of when people died.
I would love to see it.
We need to know how many people died at what age. That is the critical data we do not have.
Here's a link to the Victorian Episode:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8aKwYECKxVw&list=PLE6540D9DCB4A9949
Pretty interesting and entertaining stuff....
Check out this video by Dr. Knobbe on vegetable oils: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kGnfXXIKZM&t=0
I have seen that video - he makes a good case & is one of the reasons I do not use veg oils! I’ve gotten so hardcore I won’t eat in restaurants any more because I know they use it (1st/primary reason among all the reasons I don’t ‘eat out’).
You’re saying there were all sorts of deaths in the Victorian era attributed to boating, farming, and horses. I’m saying if that’s so and they lived as long as limeys today, then pip pip hooray!
That is the critical data which we do not have, and which they do not give.
They simply assert it is so, based on the fact that some Victorians lived as long as we do today.
It has always been so.
Some people live long and healthy lives, in any era.
It it what percentage which do so that is the important data.
The article does not show that information.
It simply asserts it is true.
Here is some data from the Sweden which shows life expectancy at age 50 and 65.
You can see in 1861-70, at age 50, the life expectancy for men was 19.4 years, for women, 21.3 years.
If we jump forward 150 years to 2010-2014, the live expectancy for men is 31.57 years, for women, 34.74.
This is an increase of about 12 years for men and 13+ years for women. Those numbers are significant.
I do not know if similar data exists in the UK.
Somewhere, there is data for what life expectancy was at age 5, and so on. This shows the premise of the article we are discussing is false.
People after about 1970 live much longer than they did in 1870. The chart shows similar advances to Sweden, referred to earlier.
Notice that English men today, at age 65, live about 8 years longer; women live about 10 years longer, than they did in 1870.
The numbers vary a bit by country.
It was all fun and games until Jack the Ripper showed up or somebody died of cholera.
Ummm. This lines up with None of my readings about that era in England. This was the era of large estates. Limited food supply starvation impoverished filthy cities. And diseases. Typhoid scarlet fever tb diphtheria were common. This is some leftist screed about being happy peasants with less.
And multiple wives because of childbirth deaths.
There were no toddler foods. Everyone ate the same once teeth arrived
If you’re talking about nutrition and healthcare, as the authors are, you HAVE to take accidents out of the equation.
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