American Decades
"Tell 37-Year Rise in Better Eating"
Newspaper article
By: The New York Times
Date: July 19, 1946
Source: "Tell 37-Year Rise in Better Eating." The New York Times, July 19, 1946.
Introduction
The first four decades of the twentieth century were an era of rapid ups and downs in the nation's economic state. These fluctuations were mirrored in Americans' well-being, including their diets. The prosperous 1920s brought no national food shortages, but scientific research on nutrition was still in its infancy. The 1930s were a decade of want for many, and even people who ate sufficient calories may not have been eating enough nutritious foods. The 1940s and World War II (1939–1945) created a new situation for nutrition. Although food supplies were adequate, America faced the extra task of feeding troops and helping its allies.
Studies of particular populations, particularly draftage men, had found...
[The entire page is 1325 words long]
1940's Medicine and Health Primary Sources
- "The Lessons of the Selective Service"
- "The Job Ahead"
- "The Diagnostic Value of Vaginal Smears in Carcinoma of the Uterus"
- Penicillin
- "Cut Excess Weight, Women Are Urged"
- "America Is Learning What to Eat"
- "Demerol, Newly Marketed as a Synthetic Substitute For Morphine, Ranks With Sulfa Drugs and Penicillin"
- "Tell 37-Year Rise in Better Eating"
- Hill-Burton Act
- The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care
- "Text of Truman Plea for Public Health Program"
- "Drug Aiding Fight on Tuberculosis"
- State Mental Hospitals
- Sexual Behavior in the Human Male
- "27,658 Polio Cases Listed Last Year"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
