| Diet | Fat: 41% Protein: 33% Carbohydrate: 26% (<13%*) ‘In 1955–1957, the percentage of calories obtained from protein and fat was high while the percentage derived from carbohydrate was low’.1 †Importantly, the 26% carbohydrate estimate accounted for glycogen, which was not known at the time rapidly degrades to lactate on death of the animal. Thus, the carbohydrate intake was likely <13%. ‘…they previously lived a seminomadic life stopping at places where the hunting and trapping proved best. In the summer they would migrate to the coast to fish and hunt marine mammals and birds. Within the last two to three decades, however, they have stayed permanently in the mountains’.1
| Fat: 40% Protein: 15% Carbohydrate: 45% ‘The percentage of total calories obtained from protein had decreased by about 50% and that from carbohydrate increased by nearly 50%’.1
‘While previously all able men in the village frequently were out hunting, trapping and fishing, only a couple of the young men were still actively engaged in such activities in 1965…the income financed the purchase of refined foods from the local stores…only some 20% of the food intake was made up of native foods, mainly caribou meat. Hunting was now mostly limited to the short periods when the caribou came close to the village’.1
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| Dental health | Prior to 1960 ‘few or no dental problems’ in the“‘Eskimos living on their native food’1
1955–1957 ‘50% of the children in 1955–1957 had caries-free primary teeth, all the children had decayed teeth in 1965…The most dramatic change was observed in individuals ≥30 years of age. In this previously caries-free group, all subjects had developed caries in 1965’.1
| 1965 ‘The change in diet was accompanied by a drastic increase in the prevalence of dental caries’.1
The average number of affected teeth for primary teeth showed an ‘Almost 90% increase’ in the sum of decayed, missing and filled permanent teeth For those ‘…over 6 years of age exhibited a four-fold increase’.1
‘The most dramatic change was observed in individuals 30 years of age or older. In this previously caries-free group, all subjects had developed caries in the course of 8 years’.1
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