Principles of Public Health. Thomas Dyer Tuttle
Figs. 7 and 8. If you keep your overcoat on in the house, your underclothes become damp from perspiration, and when you go outdoors your body becomes chilled.
As soon as the weather gets cold, put on your overcoat every time you go outdoors, and take it off as soon as you come into the house. This is troublesome for boys and girls to do, because they want to run in and out of the house so often; but on the other hand, think of all the cells you will kill if you do not do this, and you will certainly consider it worth while to take off your coat and put it on again.
Questions. 1. How does keeping the body equally covered protect the cells? 2. Give reasons for not wearing too heavy clothing. 3. When is it safe to sit in a draft, and when dangerous? 4. What is the danger of keeping on wet shoes or other damp clothing? 5. When and why should overcoats be worn?
Remember. 1. Clothing should be just heavy enough to keep the body warm all the time. 2. Never take off your coat or sit in a draft when you are too warm. 3. Since wearing damp clothing causes a great deal of sickness, change your clothes as soon as they become wet or damp. 4. Do not forget to take your umbrella when it is raining and to wear your rubbers when the ground is wet. 5. In cold weather wear your overcoat when you are outdoors, but take it off when you come into the house.
CHAPTER IV THE USES OF FOOD
We kill a great many of the cells in our bodies by starving them; either we do not give them enough food or we do not supply the right kind of food.
Why the body needs new cells
Not only must we feed the cells in our bodies, but we must be constantly making new ones, for in all our work or play, awake or asleep, we are constantly using up certain cells. These cells are used to make the body go, just as the engine uses coal to form the steam that gives it power to run. Boys and girls grow fast and, of course, if they expect to become well men and women, they must make a great many new cells all the time, in addition to those used in doing the work of the body. If we are to make new cells we must have the right kind of food with which to make them.
How the body keeps itself warm
We want to do something besides make new cells; we want to keep warm and well the cells we already have. No amount of clothing would keep you warm if you were not making heat inside your body all the time, any more than you could make a telephone post warm by putting your coat on it. Therefore it is necessary to have food that makes heat in the body, in addition to food that builds cells.
We eat a great many kinds of foods, and all that we eat is used either for building new cells or for producing heat in the body. Thus we can divide all our foods into two classes—building material and heat-producing material. The type of building material is lean meat, and the type of heat-producing material is fat meat and starches, such as potatoes and bread. Milk contains much building material as well as heat-producing material. That is why a baby grows and keeps warm while he takes nothing but milk.
The building foods
Lean meat is the best of all building foods. Eggs are largely a form of lean meat, and hence constitute a good article of food for building purposes. Certain vegetables contain a large per cent of building material; this is especially true of dried beans and peas. Wheat flour and corn meal (particularly when made of whole wheat and unbolted meal) contain much building material.
It is possible for one to live and grow when eating only vegetable matter. But the boy or girl who tries to become a strong man or woman by eating only vegetables will be disappointed; these are mostly heat-producing foods and will not make strong bodies. Experience has proved that the best results are obtained by eating what is called "a mixed diet," that is, a diet composed partly of lean meats and partly of fats and vegetables.
The heat-producing foods
Of the heat-producing foods, fat is the most powerful. Most of the fat that we eat is used immediately for producing in the body heat, and therefore power, but a part of it is stored up for future use. We see it in all healthy young persons. It is this stored-up fat that gives the body its rounded form. When any one has been sick he is thin, because, to produce heat and power while he was sick, he has had to use the fat stored up in his body. To have such a supply of fat is like having a bank account to draw on when out of work. We might call the deposits of fat in our bodies our health banks.
Fat meat is not the only form in which we eat fats; we eat them in a great many other ways. Certain vegetables, such as beans, contain an oil that forms fat. Ripe olives contain a great deal of fatty oil. Butter is a very important form of fat, and cream contains a large amount of it.
Cost of suitable foods
In selecting our foods we should think of two things: first, the value of the food as a heat-producer or as a building material; and second, the cost of the food. We may like butter much better than bacon, but we should remember that, pound for pound, bacon has a greater nourishing power than butter, and a pound of bacon will cost far less than a pound of butter.[1]
Vegetable foods produce heat by means of the starch which they contain. All vegetables contain starch. This starch is changed into a kind of sugar in the body, and when thus changed it is used to produce heat and power. All vegetable foods do not have the same heat-producing power. There is more heat-producing power in a pound of oatmeal than there is in ten pounds of cabbage. Ten cents' worth of dried beans will produce more heat in the body than will a dollar's worth of lettuce. Thirty cents' worth of corn meal will do more building in the body than will a piece of mutton worth a dollar and a half; but you would have to eat a large amount of corn meal in order to secure the building effect that would result from eating a small quantity of mutton. In most fruits the only nourishing quality is in the sugar they contain. This sugar produces heat in the body just as starch does.
The real value of advertised foods
You will see some foods advertised as possessing a wonderful nourishing power. Do not let such statements deceive you, for no food can have a greater nourishing power than the things from which it is made. If the particular food advertised is made from wheat flour, its nourishing power is just the same as that of an equal quantity of wheat flour. If it is made from corn meal, it can have no greater nourishing power than has the meal itself.
We have learned something about the materials necessary in food and why they are needed. We must now learn why foods that contain these materials sometimes do not give us as good results as we might hope for.
Questions. 1. What use does the body make of new cells? 2. How does the body keep itself warm? 3. Name two uses that the body makes of food. 4. What foods are especially useful for making cells? 5. What foods are chiefly used for making heat? 6. Select articles of food for two meals of equal nourishing value, one meal to be expensive and the other inexpensive. 7. How would you determine the real value of any food?
Remember. 1. Foods are used to make heat and power in the body and to make the body grow. 2. The foods that make the body grow are called building materials, and lean meat is the best kind of building material. 3. The foods that produce heat and power in the body are called heat-producing materials, and fats and starches are the best heat-producers. 4. All vegetables contain starch, some of them contain a fatty oil, and most of them contain some building material. 5. You can get as much building and heat-producing material from cheap foods as you can from expensive foods.
CHAPTER V CARE OF FOOD—MEATS
Value of meat as a food
Meat