Swedish
people as whole have some of the best teeth in the world, but it wasn't
always so. In the 1930s, even three-year-olds had cavities in most of
their teeth. There weren't enough dentists to repair teeth, and no one
knew how to prevent tooth decay, because they didn't know what caused
it. They needed to do some controlled experiments. What they did was
highly unethical, and would never be permitted today.
During
the second World War, at a mental hospital outside of Lund, Sweden,
researchers forced a group of patients to ingest 24 pieces of a sticky,
light brown substance in a single day. These severely disabled patients
were involuntary participants in a long-term study commissioned by the
state medical board in cooperation with big industry, and this coerced
feeding would continue for three years. The four to six doses that they
consumed four times a day over that time were in some ways sweeter than
their typical medicines—but also more troubling. No benefit to the
patient was ever expected. Rather, the goal was to measure the damage
inflicted by the substance over time and determine a dosage safe for
public consumption.
That substance was caramel, and
it inflicted so much damage to the patient's teeth that we learned it
was sugar that caused tooth decay. Read about
the experiments and the legacy they left behind, at Atlas Obscura.
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