JoM wrote:I was just surprised that there were still cases of it. It's a disease I associate with pre-WW2.
Personally I thought it was a disease caused by a lack of knowledge about basic nutrition. Which, of course, a growing number of young women no longer have. In this age of fast food, no thought going into meals because someone thought of it for you and children of 15 year old's having children at 15, what else could we expect.
After WW2 there was a comprehensive programme of educating women about the dangers of bad nutrition. Now there is an expectation that this knowledge is somehow endemic in our society and we no longer need to educate young mothers about the dangers.
No, of course we don't need to educate them, we just force the children to take vitamins whether they need them or not...
There are two very important points here.
1. How quickly knowledge is lost when it is not constantly refreshed
2. How our society has changed that we think it is acceptable to target the symptoms rather than educating the problem....
Because in the current mode, nobody will feel responsible and nobody will do what needs to be done. Reality is the Government can't do this for everyone, people have to do this for themselves. where Government should be targeting their effort is in nutritional education and also in ensuring that nobody comes into the country with TB....
Both of which successive governments and Councils have failed at miserably....