Article ID: CBB001551169

Sugar in Mid-twentieth-century Australia: A Bittersweet Tale of Behaviour, Economics, Politics and Dental Health (2015)

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History is replete with debates between health professionals with concerns about practices and products and others who either challenge scientific evidence or believe that the greatest public good is achieved through maintenance of the status quo. This paper provides a 1950s socio-scientific perspective on a recurring problem for health professionals. It analyses dentists' promotion of oral health by discouraging sugar consumption and the sugar industry's defence of its staple product. Despite scientific evidence in support of its case, the dental profession lacked influence with government and large sections of the Australian community. The division of powers within the Australian Constitution, together with the cause, nature and ubiquity of caries and Australians' tolerance of the disease, were relevant to the outcome. In contrast, the sugar industry was a powerful force. Sugar was a pillar of the Australian and Queensland economies. The industry contributed to the history of Queensland and to Queenslanders' collective psyche, and enjoyed access to centralized authority in decision-making. The timing of the debate was also relevant. Under Prime Minister Robert Menzies, the Australian Government was more concerned with promoting industry and initiative than oral health. This was a one-sided contest. Patterns of food consumption evolve from interactions between availability, culture and choice. Food and associated etiquettes provide far more than health, nutrients and enjoyment. They contribute to economic and social development, national and regional identity and the incidence of disease. The growing, milling and processing of sugarcane and the incorporation of sugar into the Australian diet is a case study that illuminates the interface between health professionals, corporations, society and the state. Today, for a variety of reasons, health professionals recommend limits for daily intake of sugar. Calls for dietary reform are not new and invariably arouse opposition. The issue came to the fore between 1945 and 1960, when dentists contended that the consumption of sugar either caused or contributed to a major health problem, namely dental caries (tooth decay). Representatives of the sugar industry defended their staple product against these claims, which emerged at a critical time for the industry. With hindsight, these exchanges can be seen as a precursor to more diverse and recurring debates relating to contemporary health campaigns. This paper documents and analyses the contemporaneous scientific and socio-political backgrounds underpinning these engagements

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Authors & Contributors
Whitehurst, John Robert
Marshall J. Becker
Marloes Rijkelijkhuizen
Berg, Anne Hagen
Pienaar, Kinar
Reina de Raat
Journals
Journal of the History of Dentistry
Studium: Tijdschrift voor Wetenschaps- en Universiteitgeschiedenis
Scientia Canadensis: Journal of the History of Canadian Science, Technology, and Medicine
Osmanli Bilimi Arastirmalari: Studies in Ottoman Science
Medical History
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
Publishers
McMaster University (Canada)
University of California Press
Routledge
Palgrave Macmillan
MIT Press
McGill-Queen's University Press
Concepts
Medicine and politics
Public health
Dentistry
Dental hygiene
Medical education and teaching
Medicine
People
Parmly, Levi Spear
Burney, Leroy Edgar
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century, early
20th century
19th century
Etruscan civilization
Places
Canada
United States
Québec (Canada)
Netherlands
Australia
United Kingdom
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