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Saturday, March 10, 2018

Poor rural Victorians 'had best diet'

From The BBC

9 March 2018

Poor, rural societies which ate high-quality foods bought locally had the best diet and health in mid-Victorian Britain, a new report has revealed. The healthiest regions, measured by low mortality rates, were often the most isolated. In those areas, people would have consumed plenty of locally-produced potatoes, whole grains, vegetables, fish and milk. There were also fewer deaths there from pulmonary tuberculosis. This suggests people had better diets, the researchers writing in JRSM Open suggest. They found the most nutritious diets were enjoyed in isolated, rural areas of England, the mainland and islands of Scotland and the west of Ireland - which was at that time part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

Dr Peter Greaves, study author from the Leicester Cancer Research Centre, said: "The fact that these better-fed regions of Britain also showed lower mortality rates is entirely consistent with recent studies that have shown a decreased risk of death, following improvement towards a higher Mediterranean dietary standard. The rural diet was often better for the poor in more isolated areas because of payment in kind, notably in grain, potatoes, meat, milk or small patches of land to grow vegetables or to keep animals. Unfortunately, these societies were in the process of disappearing under the pressure of urbanisation, commercial farming and migration." Dr Greaves said these changes in Victorian society led to worse diets among poor, rural populations and resulted in locally-produced food becoming less diverse - something that has since occurred across the world.

In the middle of the 19th Century, fewer than half of the near 19 million people in England and Wales were living in large urban centres. Among the three million population of Scotland, only one million lived in town districts, while fewer than 30% of the 5.5 million population of Ireland was urban. For many poor people across Britain, white bread made from bolted wheat flour was the staple component of the diet. When they could afford it, people would supplement this with vegetables, fruit and animal-derived foods such as meat, fish, milk, cheese and eggs - a Mediterranean-style diet. Poor people living in wealthier farming districts who were usually paid in cash often had great difficulty getting these foods on a regular basis, but in more isolated areas of Britain milk and fish were more accessible. A good number of country dwellers lived to ripe old ages, the researchers said. In the poor rural districts of Connaught in the west of Ireland, for example, nearly 20% of people reached the age of 65 or more and some reached the age of 95 or even 100.

[I always suspected that civilisation and especially urbanisation was fundamentally a bad decision on someone’s part. Of course it’s also true that some of the best and healthiest diets we’ve had in the UK for quite some years was during the government rationing during WW2. With little to binge on and an enforced (except for the rich and powerful naturally) balanced diet people’s health actually improved during the war years rather than, as most expected, decline due to lack of imported produce. Plus of course in both cases of the Victorians and WW2 there was a significant lack of processed food. Basically if you want to live longer healthier lives stop eating crap.]

6 comments:

Mudpuddle said...

hear hear! altho i'm as guilty as most, it's not my fault that what's good for you tastes bad and what's bad for you tastes good...

Brian Joseph said...

Thus makes sense. Non processed, plant based foods are the way to go. Fish Is perhaps the best protein source. I kind of hate the low carb craze. I firmly believe the problem is proceeed carbs like the white bread that you mention.

CyberKitten said...

@ Mudpuddle: Fat & sugar taste GOOD. We're 'designed' for it. It's why processed food tastes so good and makes us gain so much weight.

@ Brian: Study after study shows that the simple diet is the best all round. It's a habit that I think we all need to get into much more - including me!

VV said...

Yes, the crap tastes so good, and you know some manufacturers know just the right mix of sugar and fat to get our brains hooked on it. Having recently cut out most of the crap, I can attest to improved health and weight. Now to ween myself off the rest of the crap. 😊

CyberKitten said...

That's the hard bit - weening.... [grin]

VV said...

Tell me about it! I've cut out all grains, which cuts cookies, cakes, breads, pies, cinnamon rolls, and that cuts out most desserts. My one carb treat are potato chips and sour cream. I could eat a whole bag and really need to cut them out as well, but then I worry I'd just find some other guilty pleasure. So as long as I'm still losing weight, I'll try to eat them in moderation.