Kennedy wants to make America healthy again but was it ever?

A MAGA slugline
US health history under the microscope
Soaring obesity
Poor health rates
Kennedy's time machine
The 1990s
A golden age
Hedonistic lifestyles
Heart issues
Heavy smokers
Cancer raises its ugly head
The baby tipple
Spanish Flu
Prohibition
Part of the daily diet
Staggering quantities
Sober demeanors
Fantasy
A MAGA slugline

No doubt inspired by the MAGA slogan, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has vowed to Make America Healthy Again.

 

US health history under the microscope

But which period exactly in American history is the incoming Health and Human Services Secretary referring to when he uses the word “again”?

 

Soaring obesity

Clearly, America is not in great shape health-wise with obesity running to 42.4% in adults, and 20% in children and adolescents, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

Poor health rates

In the 2020s, Americans have a shorter life span and more injuries and illnesses than people in other high-income countries, according to a report in The National Library of Medicine.

Kennedy's time machine

But was the country’s health actually better at any time in the past and how could Kennedy transport us back to that era?

 

The 1990s

1990 was hailed as a “healthier” time for the US in a Federal report, a claim that was subsequently debunked by an opinion piece in The New York Times which said that the number of people with a chronic illness rose 7% between 1984 and 1989.

 

A golden age

The 1960s might seem like America’s golden age, when ultra-processed food was still off the menu and people were more physically active.

 

Hedonistic lifestyles

However, a glance at several episodes of “Madmen” which depicts early corporate America, and it becomes clear that damaging levels of smoking and drinking were indulged in.

Heart issues

In fact, Dr. Jeremy Greene, a historian at Johns Hopkins University, points out that America was dogged by an extreme number of heart attacks and strokes during that period, The New York Times reports – double as many as today.

 

Heavy smokers

This was in part due to America being the heaviest smoking country in the West, according to the British Medical Journal.

 

Cancer raises its ugly head

Go back a decade and cancer was rife, with 194 cancer deaths per 100,000 compared to 142 in 2024, making it the country’s second biggest killer.

 

The baby tipple

Dial back to the beginning of the 20th century when parents were advised against giving their babies a tipple to put them to sleep. Would that be a healthier time for the US?

Spanish Flu

Well, actually, no. At that time, antibiotics were not yet available and the 2018 Spanish Flu caused around 675,000 fatalities.

 

Prohibition

This was just after Prohibition was introduced in 2017 to put a stop to a habit that had the nation in its grip.

 

Part of the daily diet

According to the BBC, early Americans would take a dram for breakfast followed by a lunchtime and supper tipple, and ending the day with a well-deserved nightcap.

 

Staggering quantities

As early as 1790, most Americans consumed an average 5.8 gallons of the hard stuff a year each, which makes you wonder how the American Dream didn’t remain just that.

 

Sober demeanors

"You would think people would be staggering around drunk, but most people were able to handle their drink because it was integrated into daily life," says Bruce Bustard, senior curator of Spirited Republic: Alcohol in American History.

 

Fantasy

So, all in all, as Nancy Tomes, a historian at Stony Brook University, told The New York Times, “I don’t know what ‘again’ Kennedy is imagining. The idea that once upon a time all Americans were healthy is a fantasy.”

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