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Posted
Are You One of the Shrinking Americans?
By Joshua Holland, AlterNet
Posted on July 9, 2007, Printed on July 10, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/56303/

According to a new study, white and black Americans have been shrinking dramatically relative to their European counterparts since the end of World War II.

Researchers say a population's average height is a "mirror" reflecting the socioeconomic health of a society and speculate that Americans' worship of "market-based" social policies may explain why we're now looking up to the Germans and Swedes.

It's a dramatic reversal. We had always been giants, with the tallest men in the world, going back as far as the data exists (at least to the mid-19th century). During the First World War, American GIs still towered over the Europeans they liberated. But for three decades beginning at the end of World War II, Americans' average height stagnated while Europeans continued the growth-spurt that one would expect to see during a period of relative peace and rising incomes.

Now, with an average height of 5'10", American men are now significantly shorter than men from countries like Denmark (6-footers) or the Netherlands (6' 1"). In fact, Americans -- men and women -- are now shorter, on average, than the citizens of every single country in Western and Northern Europe.

And our vertical challenge is continuing to grow; American whites born between 1975-1983 started growing again, but still not as quickly as Western Europeans born in the same period. Meanwhile, the average height of American blacks in that age group remained unchanged.

The study avoided capturing the effect that immigrants coming from less developed (and presumably shorter) countries might have by looking only at non-Hispanic whites and blacks in the United States. The researchers also compared people born in the same period in order to avoid the effect aging has on height. The data were actual measurements rather than the heights people reported to researchers, as some earlier studies had used.

How can one explain that reversal -- a turnaround the study's authors, Benjamin Lauderdale at Princeton University and John Komlos at the University of Munich, call "remarkable"? They believe it's a result of "differences in the socioeconomic institutions of Europe and the United States":


We conjecture that the U.S. healthcare system, as well as the relatively weak welfare safety net, might be why human growth in the United States has not performed as well in relative terms ...

What determines the height of a population?

Scientists have a good understanding of the factors that determine height. Genetic variations are key to individuals' heights but aren't a significant factor in the average height of a population. That has to do with health and nutrition, especially during childhood, from prenatal health through adolescence. The authors of the study note that, in the scientific community, "there is widespread agreement that nutritional intake, the incidence of diseases and the availability of medical services have a major impact on human size."

More research is needed to fully understand why Americans are shrinking relative to the Europeans, but some differences between the two cultures -- and their political economies -- stand out.

Healthcare is one. It's not just that Europeans are universally covered while one out of seven Americans is uninsured; it's also the difference in approach. Specifically, public-sector healthcare puts a greater emphasis on prevention, while our for-profit insurance-based system creates incentives to treat illness rather than prevent it. This leads not only to much greater costs -- the United States spends about twice as much per person on healthcare as the rest of the advanced economies do -- but also plays a likely role in our declining stature.

The United States also has far more concentrated wealth than any of its European allies. That means that while we are, on average, one of the wealthiest countries in the world, we also lead all the advanced economies in poverty. Poverty limits access to both healthcare and good nutrition.

A more important factor, in terms of average height, is childhood poverty. Here, the United States stands alone among the advanced economies with a stunning figure: 18 percent of American children -- almost one in five -- live in poverty. No other industrialized country comes close -- it's about five times the child poverty rate in Northern Europe. Again, nutrition and access to healthcare both vary with family income for children just as they do in adults.

Nutrition is a key determinant of height. According to the study, "U.S. children consume more meals prepared outside the home, more fast food rich in fat, high in energy density, and low in essential micronutrients, than do European children." That is ultimately a cultural issue -- a result of a fast-food lifestyle that may have long-term consequences for growing bones. Public and corporate policies play a role as well: the United States stands out from Europe (and the rest of the world) in its lack of family-friendly workplaces. According to a study conducted by researchers at Harvard, it is among only five countries in the world that doesn't mandate some form of paid maternal leave. The only other advanced economy among those five is Australia, where women are guaranteed an entire year of unpaid leave.

That makes it all but impossible for most people to effectively balance work and family life and that, in turn, means more fast food on the run and less time taking care of sick kids -- both factors that constrain average height. And the potential impact on height might be greater still before the kids are born; research shows that every week of paid maternity leave significantly reduces infant mortality rates, a key indicator of prenatal health.

Priorities

The key finding of the study is is not that we are shrinking in absolute terms, it's that we're falling behind relative to our wealthy cousins. Europeans have grown in height as much as the rise in their average incomes during the 20th century would predict; Americans have not.

And it's not just height. Among the 20 most developed countries in the world, the United States is now dead last in life expectancy at birth but leads the pack in infant mortality -- forty percent higher than the runnerup -- and in the percentage of the population that will die before reaching 60. (Perhaps it shouldn't be much of a surprise, then, that we lead the world in mental illness.)

These are above all else, a reflection of our priorities. It's not just that we accept a child poverty rate that would be a front-page scandal in most of the world's wealthy countries, we also spend the least on social services. The two are correlated; as economist Sylvia Allegretto has pointed out, "Those countries with higher social expenditures -- as a percentage of gross domestic product, or GDP -- have dramatically lower poverty rates among children."

According to Lauderdale and Komlos, one has to look at the interplay between several factors to understand what's going on. "[T]he political economy of the healthcare system, education, transfers to the poor and government policy toward equality (hence taxation policy) all matter" in determining average height, say the researchers.

These are policy matters that are usually understood as ideological, as left-right issues. In one sense they certainly are, but they're also questions of gearing public policy to the long- or the short-term, and we seem to prefer short-term approaches. Investing in our children's health and well-being may not pay off in terms of lower taxes next quarter or next year, but it might allow them to walk a bit taller a generation or two down the line.

Joshua Holland is an AlterNet staff writer.

© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/56303/
 
Posts: 863 | Location: West Palm Beach, FL | Registered: 21 June 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Stunted growth, stunted intellect. It's the American way. The genetic potential can't be reached without adequate nutrition.

Retired Monk
"Ideology is a disease"
 
Posts: 3412 | Location: denver co | Registered: 17 April 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by polycarp:
Stunted growth, stunted intellect. It's the American way. The genetic potential can't be reached without adequate nutrition.

Retired Monk
"Ideology is a disease"


My daughter, who lived and studied in Holland for 7 years, and I were discussing the eating habits of both countries, here and there. We both agree that Holland has its own junk food, REALLY junk food, plus it has American McDonald/Burger King, etc. Dutch vitamins directions tell you to take X amount when having a European diet and double when you're following an American diet. We both laugh at that. Yet studies name the Dutch people the tallest in the world at the moment. I tend to think that that has more to do with genetics, and perhaps the quality of life, i.e. having more free time to spent with the family, having excellent healthcare, and having social programs that take care of things when needed.
All of this causes for greater happyness and contentment and less crime, and maybe even growing taller. Who knows? Can stress stunt growth? The article is simplefying things somewhat I think.
During the war we went hungry and ate whatever was available, and the food did not improve much after the war until about 4 years later. Yet I am 5'9" and not considered tall there. My sister is 6', a normal height in Holland.
My son, who has ADD and was on Ritalin for many years, a regular American kid is 6'4". He may not have had as much junkfood as the average American, but he had his share. And the Ritalin certainly did not stunt his growth either.

So...???
 
Posts: 863 | Location: West Palm Beach, FL | Registered: 21 June 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Shrinking? If you are claiming that the average American is shorter today than he was 25 or 50 years ago like the term "shrinking" suggests then it is on its face false. Also I would STRONGLY contest that the average male height in the non-dutch countries of europe is greater than 5'10" tall.
 
Posts: 3 | Location: Minnesota | Registered: 12 December 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Milton Friedman:
Shrinking? If you are claiming that the average American is shorter today than he was 25 or 50 years ago like the term "shrinking" suggests then it is on its face false. Also I would STRONGLY contest that the average male height in the non-dutch countries of europe is greater than 5'10" tall.


The article seems to depend on information coming from Professor John Komlos, an American, teaching economics at Ludwig- Maximilian's Universitaet of Munich where he gathered information about body length of people around the Globe and wrote this paper,claiming the Dutch were now the tallest people around the globe. He describes why that should be so. The Scandinavians were always considered the tallest, now it is the Dutch. For instance he claims that in 1860, Americans were 7 centimeters taller than the Dutch and now it is quite the opposite. I posted it because I considered it silly, in the sense that I'm used to tall people......and the generalizations suggest a total unfamiliarity with Holland. Implying that Europe has no junk food and only eats nutricious food. You wouldn't know it from observing Dutch teenagers today (I live there part of the year)
He claims the average male in Holland is 183.2 cm which is slightly over 6ft tall, while the average female is 170 cm, which is 5'7"
His and other articles DO refer to much better healthcare and a welfares state which is often criticized in the U.S. but seems to increase human growth as well as effect the average lifespan.

I didn't make it up....

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/2003674.cms

http://cbs2.com/watercooler/watercooler_story_259164247.html
 
Posts: 863 | Location: West Palm Beach, FL | Registered: 21 June 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Picture of Gnarlodious
Posted Hide Post
Study: Ritalin Stunts Growth
CBS News - 7 hours ago
(WebMD) After three years on the ADHD drug Ritalin, kids are about an inch shorter and 4.4 pounds lighter than their peers, a major US study shows


-- The only time we see the middle of the road is as we run from side to side. R.O.Clark
 
Posts: 3959 | Location: Santa Fe | Registered: 11 June 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Gnarlodious:
Study: Ritalin Stunts Growth
CBS News - 7 hours ago
(WebMD) After three years on the ADHD drug Ritalin, kids are about an inch shorter and 4.4 pounds lighter than their peers, a major US study shows


Well, I've heard that info. Perhaps good for my son he was on it. 6'5" is tall enough no?
 
Posts: 863 | Location: West Palm Beach, FL | Registered: 21 June 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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