Blog Assignment
Poverty in the United States and in the world as a whole affects young children in similar ways negatively. I remember hearing stories from my father of how poor they were growing up in Galena, Kansas. Although the depression was supposed to be over when he was born in 1939, their town and surrounding towns were built because of mining. According to my father, the mining industry in that area had almost disappeared after World War I thus leaving the area impoverished after businesses left the area following the miners. My father was the 5th of 6 living children and understood hand me down farmer jeans and so forth. He remembers lying in bed in his room and seeing the stars some nights. His mom raised chickens to sell the eggs for bills to be paid. His early memories of walking were those of being sent to the back ‘coup’ to get eggs for someone at the front door. What impresses on my mind is how he stayed relatively healthy all these years and did not have fresh fruits weekly and only protein from beans many times. There was no baby formula, so he ate a smashed version of what the family ate. There was no cow, so milk was a special treat in the house when someone traded for eggs. Love and respect was in the home so those hard times of dinner with only biscuits and gravy seemed like a gourmet meal to him. He became a survivor like many other people in that era. However, due to poverty his teeth and bone health suffered. As a child he suffered unusually caused broken bones. Tooth aches were the norm for him and there was no real dentist to help. In his late twenties he had to get a full set of implant teeth (He would be so angry for this post. Don’t tell him.).
I wanted to see how adults’ health in developed countries was affected when they grew up in poverty. I found in my opinion a well compiled collection of statistics on the conditions of young children and adults in developing nations and developed nations. The title, “An Appraisal of the Adequacy of Dietary Mineral Intakes in Developing Countries for Bone Growth and Development in Children” (1993) alone tells the direction of the premise of the study.
This study, that includes results of previous studies, focus on mineral components in young children and adults in the same communities searching to see if mal-nutrition in poverty stricken areas (whether in well-developed or developing countries) are the causes of slower bone growth in young children. Although the results of the collection of studies ended inconclusive on what lack of minerals caused bone deficiencies in growing children, there were still a disproportionate number of children with bone disease such as rickets in children in impoverished areas. Prentice and Bates (1993) initiations of study were in Cambridge, UK and Keneba, The Gambia; which gives evidence of diversified cultures. One of the studies very interesting was that young children that were breast fed in any culture about the same proportions of minerals in their bodies whether or not they lived in the impoverished areas (p. 54).
Ann Prentice and Christopher J. Bates (1993). An Appraisal of the Adequacy of Dietary Mineral
Intakes in Developing Countries for Bone Growth and Development in Children. Nutrition
Research Reviews, 6, pp 51-69 doi:10.1079/NRR19930006.