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History Unplugged Podcast

When Good Ideas Were Bad Medicine: Why Vitamin C and Handwashing was Rejected by the Medical Establishment

History Unplugged Podcast

History Unplugged

Society & Culture, History

4.23.7K Ratings

🗓️ 10 September 2024

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

More Americans have peanut allergies today than at any point in history. Why? In 2000, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a strict recommendation that parents avoid giving their children peanut products until they're three years old. Getting the science perfectly backward, triggering intolerance with lack of early exposure, the US now leads the world in peanut allergies-and this misinformation is still rearing its head today.

How could the experts have gotten it so wrong? Could it be that many modern-day health crises have been caused by the hubris of the medical establishment? Experts said for decades that opioids were not addictive, igniting the opioid crisis. They demonized natural fat in foods, driving Americans to processed carbohydrates as obesity rates soared.

These failures of medical groupthink have been seen throughout history. Philosophers of the 16th century who claimed that blood circulated throughout the body (instead of resting in a layer below the epidermis) faced capital punishment. James Lind, who discovered that Vitamin C prevented scurvy, was ignored for 40 years. Ignaz Semmelweis was rejected by the medical community for suggesting that doctors should perhaps wash their hands before operating on patients.

Today’s guest is Marty Makary, author of “Blind Spots: When Medicine Gets It Wrong, and What it Means for Our Health.” We see how when modern medicine issues recommendations based on good scientific studies, it shines. Conversely, when medicine is interpreted through the harsh lens of opinion and edict, it can mold beliefs that harm patients and stunt research for decades.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Scott here with another episode of the History Unplugged Podcast.

0:08.0

Why is it that so many children have peanut allergies when 30 or 40 years ago,

0:12.1

none of them seemed to.

0:13.0

One doctor from Johns Hopkins University says that it all has to do with a recommendation from the American

0:18.9

Academy of Pediatrics 20 years ago.

0:20.9

They told parents not to get their children peanut products until they were three.

0:25.0

This got the science backward and triggered intolerance with lack of early exposure, causing the outbreak of a peanut allergy.

0:31.0

So what does that have to do with history? The peanut allergy is a modern day example of

0:35.2

doctors misdiagnosing a disease or ignoring a viable cure because of groupthink and

0:40.6

this has been going on for centuries. Philosophers of the 17th century

0:44.0

who suggested that the blood circulated throughout the body

0:46.0

and wasn't just a layer of fluid

0:48.0

underneath the skin, face capital punishment.

0:50.0

The recommendation of James Lynn

0:52.0

for sailors in the 18th century to

0:54.2

consume vitamin C and avoid scurvy was ignored for 40 years. And one in the 19th

0:58.7

century, rogue researchers who suggested that washing your hands could cut down on

1:02.4

mortality rates in hospitals

1:03.8

were similarly ostracized.

1:06.1

Today's guest is Marty McCary, author of Blind Spots, when Medicine Gets It Wrong and

1:09.9

what it means for our health.

1:11.4

We look at all these historical examples of how

...

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