Gail Jarrow is the author of The Poison Eaters: Fighting Danger and Fraud in Our Food and Drugs, a new book for older kids. Her other books include Bubonic Panic, Fatal Fever, and Red Madness. She lives in Ithaca, New York.
Q: Why did you decide to focus on the history of food safety
in your new book?
A: While working on my Deadly Diseases trilogy (Bubonic
Panic, Fatal Fever, and Red Madness), I read about the lack of food
and drug safety in the late 1800s/early 1900s.
As American cities grew, fewer people ate food they raised
themselves. Instead, they were getting much of it from cans sold by
manufacturers hundreds of miles away. At the same time, the use of patent
medicines exploded.
Foods and drugs weren’t regulated. People had no idea what
they were actually swallowing or giving to their children. I was curious about
how we progressed from that dangerous state to where we are today.
Q: What do you see as the legacy today of Harvey Wiley, who focused on food safety more than a century ago?
A: Wiley, who was a chemist and physician, saw the risks
when most Americans didn’t. He introduced a scientific approach to determining
safety and effectiveness of food and drugs.
Starting in the early 1880s, he and about a dozen Department
of Agriculture staff tested these products. Their small group, the Bureau of
Chemistry, was the predecessor of our current Food and Drug Administration
(FDA), an organization employing more than 17,000 people.
Today, the FDA influences many parts of our lives— food,
medical and dental treatment, cosmetics and personal care products, cell phones
and microwave ovens, tobacco products, and even our pets’ food and medical
care.
Although we can now have more confidence that our food and
drugs and medical devices are safe, the situation isn’t perfect. Every day I
see on my FDA Google Alert at least one safety issue that the agency is
investigating.
With more chemicals available than during Wiley’s time, with
more medical devices than he could have imagined, and with more foods and
medicines coming from outside the U.S., maintaining safety is a never-ending
struggle. I’m often alarmed by what I read, and I have changed my purchasing
habits.
Q: How did you research this book, and what did you learn
that especially surprised you?
A: I plunged into historical scientific and medical
materials to learn what the experts knew before and during Wiley’s work.
Using newspapers from the mid-1860s to early 1900s, I read about
public awareness of the pure food and drug movement and discovered how
attitudes changed as Wiley’s work progressed.
Because he was such an important part of the story, I
searched for as much as possible about (and by) Wiley. That took me to the Library
of Congress Manuscript Reading Room, where I found fascinating tidbits such as
his Civil War diary and letters to his opponents.
The Poison Eaters also covers what happened after the
1906 Food and Drugs Act became law, and I researched the FDA and its challenges
up to the present.
My biggest surprise was learning just how many products were
deceptive or unsafe before the early 1900s. People were regularly ingesting
hazardous chemicals, contaminated food, and worthless medicines.
I was shocked that it took more than 25 years for Wiley and
his allies (including women’s groups and muckraking journalists) to convince
Congress to pass the 1906 Food and Drugs Act. But even after the law went into
effect, it wasn’t strong enough to protect the public from new threats.
During the next 60 years, the FDA responded to several
catastrophes: radium poisoning from tonics advertised to bring good health;
child deaths from a medicine the drug company never bothered testing; and
babies deformed by an anti-nausea medication taken by their mother
(thalidomide). The law has had multiple upgrades.
Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?
A: I hope they realize how far we’ve come thanks to the
efforts of scientists and doctors, women’s groups, and journalists. But I
also want readers to be cautious about what they put into their bodies.
Although the FDA pre-approval testing for safety and
effectiveness is much more stringent than in earlier times, there are
limitations. For example, sometimes a drug’s dangerous side effects aren't
obvious until millions of people begin using it.
Fraud and deception go on today, and I give some current
examples in the book. We are bombarded with advertising for products that are
just as ineffective and unsafe as patent medicines a century ago. The FDA does
not approve these products, although people assume they do. Takeaway
lesson: Buyer beware.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: My next book, due out Fall 2020, is Blood and Germs:
The Civil War Battle Against Wounds and Disease. This will be the first in
my new Medical Fiascos trilogy.
The Civil War was gory, but twice as many men died from
disease as from battle wounds. Still, the disaster led to medical progress. By
the end of the war, doctors had improved their skills and knowledge in treating
patients. Nursing had become a respectable profession for women. Hospitals were
seen as places to heal, not die.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I have an educational background in biology and a passion
for history. This combination leads me to little-known stories about people who
have influenced our health and well-being today.
My goal is to show why it all matters while providing
readers with a window into the past. By doing in-depth research, I try to make
it a bay window, not a peephole.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Gail Jarrow.
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