Factually! with Adam Conover - The Shocking Decline in Child Mortality with Dr. Perri Klass

Episode Date: November 4, 2020

Just a century and change ago, it wasn’t a given that children would actually survive childhood. Dr. Perri Klass and Adam discuss the shocking decline in child mortality since, what life wa...s like in a time when the deaths of children were routine, and the pressures still facing parents in a now child-friendlier world. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:02:28 Hello, welcome to Factually. I'm Adam Conover. And look, it is the day after the election here in America. But I am not recording this the day after the election because of the way we produced this podcast. I have to record it a couple days in advance. So we are not able to do an episode that speaks to the exact mental state that you may be in on today that you were listening to this November 3rd, 2020. We've done our fair share of election episodes. You have probably been mainlining election media for the last couple months. Let's be honest, two years straight. And I think we all need a break. So in the coming weeks, we will have more episodes about the American political system, democracy, political science, all those good topics. But for today, let's take a break and talk about something different.
Starting point is 00:03:23 Let's talk about childhood. Today, let's take a break and talk about something different. Let's talk about childhood. You know, childhood, that magical time we all experience where you play and you explore, you learn, and you even have time to be bored. You just stare up at the sky and count clouds or whatever the hell. Hey, it's been decades since I've counted a cloud. Oh, I wish I were a child again, right? We have this idea of childhood as being this fixed thing based around exploration, play, learning, provide and how much food they could provide the family.
Starting point is 00:04:11 Hunter-gatherer societies way back when had relatively low birth rates. The amount of berries and nuts you can gather and the boars you can hunt, well, that doesn't really change because you can crank out another couple babies. In fact, as a hunter-gatherer, more kids puts greater strain on your ability to produce. But this all changed with agriculture. Once humanity started growing wheat and corn and delicious, savory turnips or whatever, the sky was the limit for how many kids you could have. Or rather, the sky was really the limit for how big your workforce could be.
Starting point is 00:04:40 See, farming, as opposed to hunting and gathering, is extremely labor intensive. You need a lot of arms to feed all those mouths. And if you're farming turnips in the year 1100 or whatever, you can't really put out a call on LinkedIn every time you need some new people who can muck about in the filth growing shit. So instead, people would literally grow their own workforce the old fashioned way through steamy church ord, peasant sex.
Starting point is 00:05:06 Agricultural families often organized production and labor around the family, literally using the kids as a workforce, so they would end up having six to eight of them just to work the fields. And this meant that childhood back then was radically different than it is today. Now, it's not exactly like kids were forced to be little adults or something. You know, they still had opportunities to screw around and play. But you can imagine how the need to put children to work from an early age in a life or death struggle to produce enough food might make parents push maturity a little bit. You know, you can imagine a farm dad of yours saying, sorry, little Aethelbert, no SpongeBob for you, only the plow. And this persisted for a long time. In America, at the end of the 18th century, women were still having about
Starting point is 00:05:52 eight kids apiece. But by the early 20th century, they were just having 3.8 kids. This was a monumental change in the way that we raised our families. And there is no single explanation for this decline. With the Industrial Revolution, for instance, more people lived in cities where it was more expensive to raise kids. Also, more kids had to go to school. Also, eventually, there were child labor laws, which stopped many children from the important work of mangling their hands in cotton looms for their weekly saucer of gruel, which meant people were a little bit less incentivized to breed new kids as an income stream. But crucially, we now also know that women led the decline in birth rates over the 19th century. Why? Well, because they were part of an incredibly
Starting point is 00:06:35 important movement to exert greater control over their own bodies and lives. Go figure. Now, fast forward to today, and we have this idea of childhood as a time of exploration, growth, and education, right? But it's only in recent generations that our kids have had the luxury to construct a concept like boredom and to expect and even demand constant entertainment. Because in the past, they were just too busy working their little asses off. their little asses off. But look, this is far from the only huge transformation in our expectations for childhood and children. In fact, there's another that's even more important. See, today, we have this pretty reasonable expectation that when a baby is born, it will, you know, live. You know, people are surprised generally when babies die today. It's a tragedy that we think of as being rather rare. But if we go back 120 or 150 years and then thousands of years before that, we're looking at a world where a huge proportion of all children died. And the massive drop in childhood mortality that we've experienced
Starting point is 00:07:37 is in fact one of the greatest triumphs of public health and medical history. And today on the show, we have someone incredibly awesome to tell us all about how this miracle occurred and let us in on this incredible history. Dr. Perry Kloss is a pediatrician and writer. Her most recent book is called A Good Time to Be Born, How Science and Public Health Gave Children a Future. Please welcome Perry Kloss. Perry, thank you so much for being here. It's my pleasure. So you've written this wonderful book, Good Time to be Born, about the differences in infant mortality in childhood in the way that babies were treated in American society just as recently as 100 years ago, what are the most stark differences that
Starting point is 00:08:26 stand out to you? Well, what struck me, and I'm a pediatrician, so I trained in pediatrics in Boston in the late 1980s. And what struck me as I was working on this project was that in my grandmother's era, in the early 20th century, in the 1920s, when my grandmothers were having their children in New York City, if you went around a table, everybody around the table would either have lost a child or would have lost a sibling or would have lost a good friend. Infant death, child death was so common. It touched every family, rich, poor, it touched every life. And then you go 60 years later into the 1980s when I'm training in pediatrics, and it's become a terrible, rare, deeply profoundly dreaded tragedy, which sometimes strikes an unfortunate family, but is by no means something that everybody assumes
Starting point is 00:09:27 is just sadly part of the story of being a parent. And I was interested in that transition, because when you stop to think about it, it's not just in my grandmother's era that so many families were touched by infant and child mortality. It's actually stretching back before my grandmother's era. It's all of human history everywhere. And this change, this change that we've become a society in which infant death, childhood death, is not a tragic but really pretty predictable part of so many families' lives,
Starting point is 00:10:02 when you come and think about it, is actually probably one of our most extraordinary achievements as a species. We did this. We changed our biology. Yeah. You know, something I'm always really interested in my work is finding out, learning about what in our daily life that we think of as like the normal state affairs is actually the anomaly like historically. Cause often things that we think are normal are anomalies and other things that we think are anomalies are actually normal, you know? And in this is a really huge one where, yeah,
Starting point is 00:10:39 we think a normal state of affairs, like a bedrock part of human society, at least here in America, is having children and raising them to a certain age. And this is like a rhythm of life that we all go through. And our rhythm right now does not involve the routine deaths of children at a very young age. But that's so recent, that change, is what you're saying. So recent. It's so recent. And admittedly, it's recent only for a certain sector of the world. It's true sooner in some countries and some social classes in other
Starting point is 00:11:15 countries, but it begins to spread. And if you look even in poorer countries around the world now, there's a lot of progress and there's a lot more security and safety. The kinds of, I mean, what I'm talking about at the turn of the century is maybe three out of every 10 babies who die by the first birthday. Two, three out of every 10. And so you remember people have more than one child. And then if your child makes it past the first birthday, two, three out of every ten. And so you remember people have more than one child. And then if your child makes it past the first birthday, and infant mortality is the number of live-born children who died by the first birthday. So it's how many out of every thousand children born alive don't make it to the first birthday. And then child mortality, we usually think of as don't make it to the first birthday. And then child mortality, we usually think of as how many make it to the fifth birthday. And so again, even if you're just thinking about my
Starting point is 00:12:10 grandmother's day, and I say my grandmother's day because when my grandmother was having children, of course, they were my parents. They're people I grew up with. It's not so long ago. And when my grandmother was having her children and when my parents were babies, there was nothing you could do about polio. When my parents were born, there were no antibiotics available if you got pneumonia. There was a whole range of things, which if they happened to you, there just wasn't anything anyone could do. And what I'm interested, well, I'm interested in so many parts of that. I'm interested in sort of how we did this as a species, how we made it possible for people to have two or three or four children and really assume that barring tragedy, barring
Starting point is 00:12:58 terrible accidents, barring fairly rare and awful diseases, they could expect that the children would live to grow up and be adults. I'm interested in how we did that and the sort of the endeavor. And I'm also interested in the question of how that shapes us as parents or, you know, as pediatricians when we look at our children. And one of the questions that I found myself asking is, by so many standards, we are the luckiest parents in history. By so many standards, right? We have this unbelievable level of safety, which my grandmother couldn't have dreamed of, and which her grandmother certainly couldn't have imagined. And yet, I mean, I don't mean to speak for all of us,
Starting point is 00:13:53 does it actually translate into less anxiety, more security? And if it doesn't, what is it? I mean, no parent in the world, no parent in this country would trade for a higher infant and child mortality rate. If I said to you, oh, you can live in a world where this will be nicer and that will be nicer, but you have to settle for three times the chance that one of your children might not make it, no parent would take you up on that. But why doesn't that translate for us as parents into a sense of gratitude and a sense of security? And it made me think a lot, both as a parent and as a pediatrician, about the kind of anxiety that's inherent in being a parent and what it's connected to. And of course, it made me think about the thing, which is going back to what you said, Adam.
Starting point is 00:14:39 Can we imagine what those parents felt like 100 years ago when a child got a fever, when a child got a sore throat, when a child, you know, wasn't doing well? How did you deal with that as a parent? And is there anything that we might think about when we think about our own anxieties today and our own uncertainties as parents? our own uncertainties as parents. And I don't pretend to have answers to all those questions, but they were some of the questions which I found most interesting when I was working on this book. Yeah, that's really fascinating. And one of my favorite things in history is I love work like Gore's that helps you embody the frame of mind of people in the past that reminds you, okay, these are people who are going through daily lives and they have experiences and emotions and they're just like me
Starting point is 00:15:30 and what were things like for them? And so, yeah, could you paint a picture of what it was like, what motherhood was like? I mean, I, I look, I'm not a mother and nor will I ever be, uh, but, uh, I have a little bit of a, I have friends who are mothers and I watch commercials and I've read magazines and I have a little bit of a sense of what some of that experience is like. What was it like 100, 120, 150 years ago? So I think that's a really interesting question. And of course, on the one hand, I can't answer it. And on the other hand, I can answer it because there's nobody who can stand up and tell me I'm wrong. Because the people who- No one knows better than you.
Starting point is 00:16:10 Right. So I don't have a single answer to it. I want to start by saying that everything that I read, certainly about parents 100 years ago, parents in the 19th century, and even parents going back before that, they love their children as much as we do. You don't ever get any sense, oh, a lot of babies don't make it, so I better not let myself be too fond of this one. There are theories that if you go far enough back, parents had to, you know, if you go to times of really, really high infant mortality, if half of the babies aren't making it, how do parents perhaps think about it, protect themselves? But if you go back to my grandmother's year, if you look at the letters that are written by mothers in the early 20th century, or the novels and poetry and letters written by parents in the early 20th century or the novels and poetry and letters
Starting point is 00:17:05 written by parents in the 19th century. They love their children tremendously, but there is a certain amount of acceptance. That is to say, you find people saying, we know this happens to everyone. We're terribly sad, but we know this happens. You find a certain kind of acceptance that this is part of parenthood. And one of my perhaps dubious theories about this, and again, I'm making this up and I have to admit I'm making it up, I'm trying to imagine myself into other eras, is I found myself thinking sometimes about the ways that we, in our time, sometimes love a very elderly parent or grandparent. I found myself thinking about, say, the way that I felt about my own mother when she was in the last years of her life, in that I loved her deeply, but I knew she was fragile.
Starting point is 00:18:00 I loved her deeply, but I knew that I might not have her with me for a very long time. And I wondered if perhaps there was a way of loving a baby, which accepted the idea that I may not have this baby for a long, long time. So that's one thing I'd suggest. I would also, of course, need to bring up religion and the idea that for many parents, that acceptance, the idea that this beautiful, lovely child has been given to you, lent to you, but may be called back, may return to heaven, is both comforting, but also for parents sometimes really challenging. That is to say, if you are a mother in a society where you are meant to accept this as possibly a religious duty, and instead you feel deeply sad, instead you perhaps even feel angry, then you also live with the awareness that perhaps you're not behaving properly.
Starting point is 00:19:08 And you can find people telling parents, especially perhaps telling mothers, that this is something that you must accept, that your baby has gone home to heaven. And therefore, maybe you aren't going to be grateful, but you have to be at least willing to accept it. And again, what's interesting is that turns out to be very, very, very hard for a lot of people, even though their faith is strong. Well, you said earlier that the way you put it was that infant death or the death of young children was in those days not as tragic as it is now. And what strikes me is like it's less perhaps I might rephrase that to say it was less unusual, but it certainly sounds like being a parent was just much more of a tragic experience that like they would have experienced it as tragically.
Starting point is 00:20:03 But it was it was not unusual to be so devastated to, to have such loss. That was just a routine part of parenting. You know, I don't know if it was ever quite routine, but it was certainly more common and certainly more predictable and absolutely it was tragic. And, you know, if you go back and you read stories of people's lives, what you find, as you would find in any era, is that people react differently. Nowadays, if somebody lost a child and was not able to recover easily from that grief, that loss was perhaps the central tragedy in an adult's life, we would find that very understandable. But you find people like that in the early 20th century and in the 19th
Starting point is 00:20:54 century as well. People who know they should be able to recover and move on, women who are often pregnant again, almost immediately, sometimes pregnant when the first child dies, but who are still clearly not able to move past that tragedy, even though they're urged to. And I can offer you some, even some famous examples of those people. And you find other people who in one way or another are able to move forward with their lives,
Starting point is 00:21:26 turn their attention to the next child. But it's very different from person to person. It's very individual. What I might say though, is that there is probably some help and comfort in the fact that many other people around you have also suffered this loss. It's not a terribly, it doesn't distinguish, mark out your family from all the other families. There's a certain commonality. There's a certain, you find, for example, when I was reading about Charles Darwin's daughter who died, and in his voluminous correspondence with the other great men of science of his moment in England, with the geologists, the botanists, it's one of the things they're writing about. Now that my poor little daughter has died,
Starting point is 00:22:19 I understand what you went through. There's a remarkable correspondence between Darwin and another scientist about how you handle the anniversary of a child's death. And so I think that that kind of commonality, the fact that, you know, you can talk to your colleagues or your friends or your circle about something like, how do you handle the, do you find that you feel terribly sad every year on the anniversary of your child's death? That's probably helpful for a lot of people. Whereas instead, families nowadays who have lost children, parents will often say that they almost don't feel they can discuss it. That if you're at a social gathering and someone, someone says to you, you know, do you have children? You can't just say we have three children, but one of them is no longer alive because it stops all conversation. It's such an unusual event. It's such a terrible tragedy.
Starting point is 00:23:19 And what I wonder is whether for some families that makes it lonelier and that makes it a little a little more harder to bear sometimes i think that i think the word we're searching for maybe is normalized that sort of loss was normalized uh a hundred years ago and uh now it's it's not in a way that i think you're right can make it more difficult to share with people or to find commonality with others because it's such a shocking thing to hear for so many people. The fact that you raised Charles Darwin is really interesting because one of the things that really struck me about your book is that you wrote about how it affects affected all classes, that it was not something that the rich people could buy their way out of? I thought that was one of the most interesting things again and again that I came across, which was this was not something which marked off rich from poor. Now, it's always been worse to be poor, and it's always been worse to be a member of a marginalized group.
Starting point is 00:24:27 The mortality has been higher among the poor. The mortality has been higher among African-American families and still is. Mortality was higher among immigrants who were crowded into the tenements. But the mortality was also high. were crowded into the tenements. But the mortality was also high. And sometimes when an epidemic came along, just as high and sometimes perhaps even higher in families who thought of themselves as more protected and more privileged. And one of the reasons that that's interesting is I think that it gives you a window that is to say, if I want to make the case to you that there was nothing that medical science could do, sometimes the easiest way to tell you is what happened to the president's child or what happened to the prince or what happened. The richest man
Starting point is 00:25:23 in history, John D. Rockefeller, the first billionaire, I believe, in history, founded the Rockefeller Institute because his beloved grandson died of scarlet fever. And so if you were my grandmother, you would say, even if you were John D. Rockefeller, there was nothing you could do. And I thought that was, I thought it was interesting for a couple of reasons. I thought it was interesting because, of course, as you find ways to protect children, as you find ways to treat some of these diseases, as you find ways to immunize children, then it does become much more a question of access, right? Access to medical care is a great thing, but access to medical care for scarlet fever before antibiotics exist is, you know, it's a comfort, but it's not a cure. Yeah. You wrote about how so many of our
Starting point is 00:26:19 great institutions exist because some very wealthy people didn't have children to pass their legacies on to. And they ended up creating, I believe you said Wellesley College, you wrote, was founded for this reason? Wellesley College, you know, the hope of leaving something to a child and then the child is lost. So Wellesley College, the estate was bought by somebody who wanted to use it as a kind of a pleasure estate. His name was, I think, Henry Henry Durant and they had a gifted young son they loved and they were going to build this wonderful estate for him but he died at the age of eight of diphtheria a disease that I've never seen because we immunize against it but a terrible and frightening disease and they had they had this estate and it eventually became a college.
Starting point is 00:27:25 And similarly, the Stanfords who had an adolescent son, they took him to Europe on the Grand Tour. They had so much money and he got sick with an infection and they took him from doctor to doctor and from town to town and he died. And so they left their estate and they left their money. I wrote part of the book at the arts colony of Yaddo in upstate New York in Saratoga Springs. Again, a fabulous, beautiful estate that a very, very wealthy couple built for their children and all four of their children died. And so I think that, you know, and then I mentioned
Starting point is 00:28:07 John D. Rockefeller and his grandson, there, you know, there are so many institutions that either the building or the grounds or the estate or just the fortune didn't go to the children because the children didn't live to grow up and all of the fortune and all of the grandeur wasn't go to the children because the children didn't live to grow up and all of the fortune and all of the grandeur wasn't enough to protect children. Wow. And we've gone deep into this interview without me asking this, what were these children dying of? Like you mentioned diphtheria, which to me, that sounds like a very Dickensian disease. I feel like I've read that in 19th century novels.
Starting point is 00:28:46 But yeah, what were these conditions that children had and how did this start to change? So I'm going to mention three different things. The babies, the sort of newborns, the one month olds, the little children, many of them are dying of causes that have to do with how they're born. They're dying of that first month of life always was tricky, and it's still tricky. They're a little premature. They don't feed well. They have multiple different conditions that they're born with that aren't quite, you know, different organs that aren't working right. They're vulnerable to infection. So newborns, and in fact, newborns are, in my book, this backwards,
Starting point is 00:29:30 because newborns are kind of the last group which are really addressed by this change. That is to say, newborns are still dying in the middle of the 20th century, who now absolutely would not die. the middle of the 20th century who now absolutely would not die. And then right around the age of one, two toddlers, a lot of them are dying of diarrhea. A lot of them are dying of infections that have to do with milk when not being pure before pasteurization comes along or food that's being mixed with water that's not completely clean. And that should sound familiar because that still happens in many parts of the world. If you don't have clean, reliable water, if you don't have a reliable milk supply, and once children stop being breastfed, those children are at risk for diarrhea.
Starting point is 00:30:21 And that's a really dangerous disease for infants and young children. risk for diarrhea. And that's a really dangerous disease for infants and young children. And then older than that, we're talking about all of these other infectious diseases. Yes, diphtheria, whooping cough, scarlet fever, polio, all the diseases that we immunize against and some that we would just treat routinely now with antibiotics. And then beyond that, of course, I talk in the book about how once you clear some of those infectious causes out of the way, and I mean, we're talking about an era in which every child gets measles. And so there's going to a certain percentage of them have the bad complications of measles. We're talking about an era in which when the diphtheria epidemics come through or the scarlet fever is bad, a lot of children get sick.
Starting point is 00:31:14 And then the ones who recover, most of them have some immunity and they do okay next time around. And man, so really what you're describing is these are so many of all the ills that are affecting all of modern society that, you know, tainted water in cities is, you know, a plague around the late 19th, early 20th century. And, you know, infectious diseases, many of these are diseases adults get as well, but children are just more vulnerable to them. They're smaller and they're what have less developed immune systems and it results in them dying. So what's striking to me is that this is a massive change, like you said, between then and now, but it's not as though, hey, we discovered one thing. Right. It's not like there was one big change that happened, which is so many of our big changes are like that, where, OK, we figured out that this was the germ theory of disease happened.
Starting point is 00:32:14 We learned about antibiotics or something like that. You're talking about dozens of different causes. So what explains the like take us from how we got from then to now. What changed? What did we do as a society? That's such a good question, because that's absolutely right. It's not one change. That's why I that's why I feel in some sense it's an underappreciated human achievement because it Polio is a campaign. We're going to solve this. We're going to find a vaccine. We found a vaccine. It's great news. We're going to vaccinate everybody. We vaccinated everybody. We've almost wiped out the disease. We see that the way we see it with smallpox, where we actually do wipe out the disease. But this isn't that. This is part public health and sanitation, right? Let's clean up the water supply. Let's pasteurize the milk. Let's open milk stations in the poor neighborhoods so that there's clean milk available for families. So it's public health and visiting nurses and sanitation. It's part bacteriology, everything you said. Let's figure out what's causing these diseases. Some of them we can
Starting point is 00:33:24 vaccinate against. Some of them we can vaccinate against. Some of them we can treat with antibiotics. It is antibiotics. And then moving on from there, if you look into the 20th century, it's also what about those newborn babies? What's happening in the delivery room? What do you do if a baby can't breathe? What do you do if a baby needs a little extra help for the first week or two? Does prematurity have to be fatal? And when you think about the science and technology that come in, starting at the beginning of the 20th century, but moving later, right, or still happening right through the 20th century,
Starting point is 00:33:58 how can you save those viewpoints? And then, and I talk about this in the book, when you clear, pediatricians used to spend their entire professional lives dealing with these infectious diseases. It was measles or it was whooping cough or it was scarlet fever or it was diphtheria. and you see accidents, you see sudden infant death syndrome, and you say to yourselves, how do you make the world safer for children? How do you make cars safer for children? How do you make sleeping safer for children? And if you look at what happens in the 20th century as a society, we pay attention, we legislate, we think about car seats and booster seats. We start the safe sleep campaign, which is hugely important. But again, you see those deaths, you see those risks, because you've cleared all of that, you know, tremendous burden of infectious disease out of the way, because you've got the immunizations and you've got the antibiotics. And the thing that I think is so interesting is that when you look at this over time, you see all of this happening. You see nutrition and clean milk and clean water and sanitation. You see parents demanding certain kinds of safety,
Starting point is 00:35:18 parents demanding legislation, parents demanding protection, parents demanding that their children be safe from things which are risky. And all of that together, the reformers, the sanitation, the engineers, the scientists, the bacteriologists, the doctors, it adds up to this huge change in, I mean, if you ask me, it's actually a huge change in what it is to be human, that you can look at your children and say, I expect them to live to grow up. I understand that there are no certainties. It's not 100%. But my experience as a parent, I hope, and I'm entitled to hope, will be that my children will live to grow up. Well, that is what an incredible change. And I want to talk more about what that means for us today and how we think of ourselves as parents, how we think
Starting point is 00:36:09 about children. But we got to take a really quick break. We'll be right back with more Perry Class. I don't know anything. Okay, we're back with Perry Class. Before we really get into the modern day, I want to hear about one of the more found, I want to hear some personal stories about some of the people who waged this fight. Tell me about Sarah Josephine Baker. Who is she?
Starting point is 00:36:38 Well, she is a doctor at the beginning of the 20th century in New York. She's a really interesting character. She comes from a good family in upstate New York, and they fall on hard times, and she decides she's got to support her mother and her sister. She goes to medical school, and she finds herself practicing in the city right at the time that people are beginning to think about whether you could save babies on a large scale. And she becomes interested in public health. She's a public health officer.
Starting point is 00:37:14 She goes from house to house in the tenements. And this is a moment when people are very concerned. You've got a large immigrant population crowded together in these tenements. And one of the things that having them crowded together in the tenements means is that, say, when the summer comes and it gets hot and babies start dying of diarrhea, and I can tell you why they're dying. You see them. There are a lot of them together.
Starting point is 00:37:36 It doesn't look right. Here you are in a city that you think is a center of civilization, a center of art, a center of culture. There are all these babies dying. And people take on the question, visiting nurse services, settlement houses. People are interested in talking to the parents. People are interested in education. People are interested in milk stations. And she gets interested in the question of whether you could prevent these deaths. And she goes on to be a pioneering. She's credited by a newspaper at the time that 90, if not for her, for Josephine Baker, if not for her,
Starting point is 00:38:15 90,000 babies now alive would have died. So it's a really massive campaign in terms of parent education, in terms of realistically figuring out how to help parents make the most of what they've got, but also in terms, and she writes about this very movingly, in terms of convincing mothers that actually, yes, they have it in their power to keep their babies alive. And the reason that that summer diarrhea is so deadly, it comes back to something you were saying before, which is of great interest to pediatricians everywhere. It's why babies are very vulnerable to certain things. Babies are very, very vulnerable to
Starting point is 00:38:58 anything that affects their airways because their airways are so tiny, so narrow compared to adults. So if something inflames the airways or swells the airway or tends to obstruct the airway, long before it's actually dangerous in adults, it's much more dangerous in babies because the tubes are so narrow. So that's always an issue in children. And the other thing that's always an issue in children is dehydration and diarrhea. Children are very vulnerable to it. They don't have as much blood volume in them. They lose fluid through their skin. They have more surface area.
Starting point is 00:39:35 There's a whole bunch of anatomic and physiologic reasons. And so when the summer comes and the milk spoils and every, you know, there's germs around and there's flies around, children are at risk for a whole multitude of reasons to get stomach upsets. And a lot of them die. And there are, you know, heartrending descriptions of what it's like for the parents to watch them. And remarkable delight that you read when you read Josephine Baker's memoir about how amazing it is to realize that children do not need to die in the summertime, that that is not a natural, absolute fact of life. Wow. That's an incredible mission. It must have been incredibly satisfying to save that many lives.
Starting point is 00:40:25 And you talk about parent education, at least based on what I've read of your book. It sounds like that's something that parents were hungry for, that the government put out pamphlets on how to protect the life of your child and that they were incredible bestsellers because people were desperate for this information. sellers because people were desperate for this information? Parents love their children. They always do. They'll they do whatever it takes to keep their children safe. Right. And sometimes they, there were, you know, there were people who, there's, you know, somebody in my book who shows up with a fake tuberculosis cure to make his fortune. And parents are desperate for the fake tuberculosis cure because there's nothing they can do.
Starting point is 00:41:14 And I think that one of the things that's true for many of the successful efforts, and there are missteps and people go wrong and people sometimes, you know, don't treat parents with sufficient respect. But for the successful efforts, it's almost always about partnering with parents and realizing, as pediatrics is nowadays, realizing that the people who really want most to keep these children safe and healthy are the people who love them so dearly, their parents, but also realizing that it's very scary for parents sometimes to change something they're doing to put their faith in something new. Well, so that brings me to my question about parents today, because we have this sort of stereotype of modern American parents that they are very anxious and very, you know, overly concerned about their child's health, helicopter parenting and, you know, keeping
Starting point is 00:42:12 everything very safe for the kids. But one thing that this, you know, you telling me this story puts into perspective is that, well, maybe that makes sense because for so much of history, like children did really easily die. And this really was life or death. And like any little thing could cause a child to pass away. So it makes that anxiety that, you know, we tend to laugh at in parents now seem more understandable to me. Does it seem that way for you? So I'm going to offer you a theory. Again, you can like it or you can not like it, but it's the thing that I
Starting point is 00:42:46 find myself thinking about when I, again, try to understand how parents and how pediatricians felt in an era when mortality was so much higher. I don't think that my grandmother believed that it was in her power to keep her children absolutely safe. I think she had to live day to day with the knowledge that the world was dangerous, that bad things happen to children, that even if you were John D. Rockefeller, as she would have said, you could not necessarily keep a child safe. I think parents today living in what is objectively a world in which there is much less infant and child mortality, I think we've put parents today in a situation where they believe that if they make all the right decisions and all the right choices and take all the right precautions,
Starting point is 00:43:44 that they can keep their children safe. And that is much truer than it would have been for my grandmother. But I think that the flip side of that is that parents feel then a sense of almost crushing responsibility. Because one of the things which is designed in there when you have a baby, and I've felt this for my own children and seen it with many other people, you look at this helpless baby, you feel this overwhelming sense of protectiveness, responsibility, this desire to do everything right. But I think that the idea that you actually can do everything right and that it is in fact a parent's responsibility to make every decision
Starting point is 00:44:25 correctly because if you do that there's some kind of guarantee that the flip side of that safety is a kind of parental anxiety a kind of desperate desire to get everything right and then of course we as we all know live in a world world where you can't actually get everything right. There's not a secret code. There's not a way to guarantee safety. But that responsibility to preserve perfect safety, I think sometimes weighs very heavily on parents now. Is that an anxiety that you think we should somehow relieve ourselves of? I mean, knowing what you do about the history of these emotions, yeah, what do you think about that?
Starting point is 00:45:15 Is that something that we should try to ameliorate or is that a necessary side effect? I think the best thing we can do with that is turn it outward a little. Yes, if we can make the world safer for all the children. If we can turn it into a way to make our streets safer. If we can turn it into a way to make sure that all of the different groups in our society enjoy all of the blessings of safety. I think if you turn it inward, as I have this one child, and it is my absolute responsibility to make every decision properly and keep this child perfectly safe, first of all, it can't be done. And second of all, you'll probably tie yourself into the kind of knots that you were talking about earlier. I think if you say, now that I understand how
Starting point is 00:46:06 a parent loves a child, now I understand why it's important that we make our city, our community, our state, our country, our world as safe as possible for children. I mean, I'm a pediatrician. I think that there's nothing better that we could all do than decide to make our community, our city, our state, our country, our world as safe as possible for all the children. I think there's a way, and I hear this in the voices of people like Josephine Baker, in which you take this emotion and you say, okay, how do we make the world more equally safe? How do we make sure that these remarkable, and this is a blessing. This is an amazing blessing. we make sure that these remarkable, and this is a blessing, this is an amazing blessing. You know, everyone, you can look around at your own siblings, you can look around at your children,
Starting point is 00:46:56 you can think about what would it mean to live in an era when no family went untouched and when many families were touched multiple times by infant and child mortality. And you can take that gratitude for living in a world where it's been so reduced and think about how do we extend it? Because it's truly about trying to make everybody safe and trying to remove this tragedy from as many lives as possible. I love that. And I think that's also really a really wonderful tonic to what I sometimes think of as the narrowing of perspective of people when they become parents is that, you know, well, they have a lot of responsibility, but only towards this one being or one or two when like we can expand that net of concern to, you know, the entire society. We can care for each other. And that leads me to my next question, because I wanted to talk about the ways in which this problem hasn't been solved, that, you know, in many parts of the world, but also here in the United States,
Starting point is 00:47:54 like there are still places where the infant mortality rate is not what we would want. I mean, the infant mortality rate for black mothers, for black children is twice what it is for white children, is my understanding. You probably know better than I do. But that's something that we've learned a lot about in recent years, has gotten a lot of coverage.
Starting point is 00:48:12 And yeah, I wonder if you could speak to that at all. Absolutely. And I think this again gets to what I'm saying, that what you want to do with this passion, and to be fair, a lot of parents do not narrow. And one of the things that I saw in the 20th century, especially, was that parents who lost a child frequently in memory and honor of that child, they get a law passed. They modify the world in some way to make it safer for other children.
Starting point is 00:48:46 And I think that when you turn that passion outwards, so, for example, the Safe Sleep campaign, which works with African-American religious and civic organizations to make sure that that message about safe sleep comes through trusted community members, is a really good example. about safe sleep comes through trusted community members. There's a really good example. And when we come to the disparities, which still exist in maternal mortality and also in infant mortality,
Starting point is 00:49:16 which you absolutely still see higher in African-American families, higher in indigenous families, you still see disparities by poverty. And the question of how you address that and what you need to do actually turns out to be a larger and more interesting question because it means addressing disparities in adult health, maternal health. It means addressing disparities in how medical care and preventive care are delivered. And so you can start with that infant mortality number, which shocks you and upsets you. But if you actually want to follow it, you're going to end up trying to create a society in which adults are healthier, families are healthier, medical care is more equitably distributed.
Starting point is 00:50:06 distributed. And I think that the victories over infant and child mortality have actually, even though, as you say, it wasn't a single campaign, they've helped us along to make a better society and a better world. But it's by no means a story that we should think of as over. So we can move our attention from my children to all children to sort of all of society that we can use our care for children as a way to care for each other more broadly. I hope so. I think so. I mean, I think that I think one of the reasons you become a pediatrician is that you like working with children. But another reason, honestly, is that even though sometimes you complain about them, you like working with children. But another reason, honestly, is that even though sometimes you complain about them, you like working with parents. I actually think that becoming a parent helps you grow up, helped me grow up, helped me learn,
Starting point is 00:50:55 helps you learn about caring for someone more than you care for yourself, helps you understand some of the emotions you see around you in the world, some of the attachments you see. And I think that there's a long history of parents who have used that, not necessarily while your baby's little, we all know how busy you are, but have used that kind of personal growth as a way of connecting to the world and making the world better. And I think that that's a story
Starting point is 00:51:24 which comes up again and again. In the book that I wrote, I start in the 19th century, I start with poets and writers who write about children's death, write about some of these topics of what they themselves have suffered, but move on from that to the question of some of the reformers and medical people who take us forward in terms of keeping children safe. Well, that's a wonderful optimistic view. I want to push on you a little bit, though, because sometimes our concern for children can be used in regressive ways or ways that, you know, come from a place of fear and it can be counterproductive. I'm thinking, for instance, school segregation battles are an example that not as medically related,
Starting point is 00:52:13 but, you know, people are very, you know, have reactionary views of their children's environment. But I'm also very interested in you mentioned, you know, vaccines for diphtheria and for all these diseases reducing the child mortality rate. And I think about today the, you know, the vaccine denialism movement, which is still based in, oh, I'm concerned about the health of my child, but involves rejecting the vaccines that have actually resulted in the lives of so many children being saved. And there's obviously a conflict there. And I want to know if you have any thoughts about that based on your work. Well, one of the reasons I was interested in writing this book is that, honestly,
Starting point is 00:52:54 the generational memory for disease is pretty short. That is to say, a disease disappears. You mentioned diphtheria. Well, diphtheria was a horror show of a disease. It's a disease which chokes off your airway. It's a disease which, you know, there are accounts of what it was like to watch children with diphther It's gone. There's a vaccine. When the original progress was made, it was breaking news. It was one of the first great victories of bacteriology. The story that everybody still remembers is Balto, the sled dog who carries the race across Alaska to carry the antitoxin to the children, right? Which we trace every year when they run the sled dog race in Alaska.
Starting point is 00:53:52 I didn't know about this. That's a really cool history. Oh, yeah. Baldo. Well, it's the most, he's got a statue in Central Park of the heroic sled dog. And you can look him up. I can't believe I don't know about this famous dog. Okay.
Starting point is 00:54:08 So let me tell you about this. It's 1925. And in Nome, Alaska, there's a developing epidemic of diphtheria. And the antitoxin, which will work, which will save the children, is in Anchorage. So they send it by train as close as they can get, but there are still almost 700 miles to go. So there are 20 sled dog teams which take the antitoxin across Alaska, and they stop at intervals to warm it because it's going to get frozen as it travels. And it's a public
Starting point is 00:54:45 event. The newspapers are carrying it. There are newsreels, the heroic dogs, and they make it. They get the antitoxin there and they save the children. And that's why there's a statue of a sled dog in Central Park in New York. But all I mean is this battle against diphtheria is headline news, newsreel news, heroic sled dogs. They have a group of horses in New York that they're injecting to produce the antitoxin. They're hero horses. That's what they're called in the headlines. They live like kings.
Starting point is 00:55:15 They're taken care of in the world's poshest. But the point is that once it's gone, once you have a vaccine and nobody gets back to diphtheria anymore, you forget it. And so I think that, you know, pediatricians like me, we sometimes are impatient with parents who are hesitant about vaccines. We don't always do a good job of explaining, but I think one of the things that I realized is you forget the things that you were afraid of 50 years ago. They don't seem scary. And so the diseases that people are protecting against with vaccines, even a disease like measles, it doesn't frighten people and therefore something else comes along and scares them. And I think one of the things that I feel looking back to these grieving and deeply sincere parents of the past is that
Starting point is 00:56:09 we shouldn't forget these ways the children suffered because the children should not suffer from these diseases again. And there's a logic to the efforts that we make to protect children with vaccines. I love vaccines, and I believe in them. One of the reasons I believe in them is because, like other people in pediatrics, I've seen at least some of that. I've never seen diphtheria, thank goodness. I've never seen polio, those I'm learning about from a textbook. But I've seen bacterial meningitis from Haemophilus influenza,
Starting point is 00:56:44 But I've seen bacterial meningitis from Haemophilus influenza. And I've seen, you know, some of the diseases and some of the serious complications of diseases like measles and chickenpox. So I understand. And, you know, you hesitate to respond to parents by terrifying them with terrifying stories. But I understand the grief that these diseases have caused in the past. And I understand what an incredible thing it is that because of the vaccines, parents are not feeling that grief. Yeah. The thing you say about our short cultural memory is so much the human condition of human society. There are so many problems that are caused by that short cultural memory. And none more than this, like you almost wish that the ghosts of our grandparents and great great grandparents could could come and shake us by the shoulders and say, no, this could come back. Like, this is serious. Like, don't you don't you understand the pain I went through?
Starting point is 00:57:41 Yeah, you do. You know what I mean? You do. Absolutely. And I think that sort of, they would also say to you looking around, they would say, your baby was born a little early and your baby is fine. How amazing. I talk in the book about telling a grandmother when I was practicing in Boston, telling her that her child had scarlet fever. She was from another country. She was Spanish speaking. And I remembered the Spanish word for scarlet fever. And I said it and she began to cry.
Starting point is 00:58:20 And I thought, oh, this is good news. Your child has scarlet fever. We'll give him a little penicillin. He'll be fine. And she heard, my child has a terrible disease. So I think if my grandmother were here right now and she would say to you, you don't have to worry about scarlet fever now. It's nothing. You can treat bacterial pneumonia now. I mean, I think that joy, You know, I mean, I think those that joy. My grandmother, of course, like everybody her age, would remember exactly the moment when she stopped having to worry about the polio epidemics every summer. And she stopped having to make decisions about, you know, would she let her child go out and would she hang something around his neck that smelled bad because maybe it would, you know, protect him. You know, she would, I think that the delight that they might take in some of these advances
Starting point is 00:59:14 would also help us. Yeah. And how does this work? You know, the research that you've done, this book is coming out at a time when we're facing unprecedented, you know, an unprecedented medical crisis in the form of a pandemic, unprecedented wildfires that have, you know, blanketed the West Coast with poisonous air for a week now. I haven't been outside in a week for two reasons now. How does that, do you have any insight into the challenges of this moment vis-a-vis, you know, keeping children safe? So one of the morals, and I think I say this in the book, is that the microbial world is with us, that bacteria and viruses take advantage of the ways that we live, as they always have, and that we have to pay attention and that we can't at any point say, okay, that's done, we've solved it. But I would say that the overall message is that we're actually very clever as a species and we can take on the individual
Starting point is 01:00:20 challenges and address them, and that we can also put these advances together, but it involves looking to science. It involves looking to public health. It involves making some decisions that are not just for our individual benefit, but that make our communities safer. I think it's a very optimistic book in the sense that this has happened, but I also think it's an optimistic book in the sense that it makes me, there are individual people, scientists in this book who I think are mistaken or who I don't like their attitude. And I have to be honest with you that, you know, some of them are my heroes, some of them are sort of my heroes, some of them are not quite my heroes. But that their collective effort actually moves us forward to a place where there's less tragedy and less grief. And I think that's actually a pretty important message for us to hear at this complicated moment. Because you're optimistic that we can continue on that path with all of the challenges that are facing us.
Starting point is 01:01:27 I'm optimistic about the different kinds of intelligence and creativity. And I'm optimistic about enterprises which draw on more than one discipline, which take public health and epidemiology seriously, which take nursing seriously, which take parent activism seriously. I'm optimistic about being able to put all of that together into moving forward. That is a wonderful message to end us on. Thank you so much for being here, Perry. I can't thank you enough. This is a fascinating conversation.
Starting point is 01:02:02 My great pleasure. Thank you for. This is a fascinating conversation. My great pleasure. Thank you for having me. Well, thank you once again to Perry Klaus for coming on the show. I can't thank her enough for sharing that with us. If you loved that interview as much as I did, please leave us a rating or a review wherever you subscribe. It really does help us out.
Starting point is 01:02:23 I want to thank our producers, Sam Roudman and Kimmy Lucas, our engineer, Ryan Connor, Andrew WK for our theme song. I want to thank the folks at Falcon Northwest for building me this incredible gaming PC
Starting point is 01:02:34 I record the show on. Check them out next time you're looking for a gaming PC. There are wonderful folks who will do you right. If you want to send me any suggestions you may have for topics we can cover on the show, please send them to factually at Adam Conover dot net.
Starting point is 01:02:49 I will promise you we do read them. And that is. Oh, you can find me on the Internet. I almost forgot to do this part. You can find me on the Internet at Adam Conover dot net or at Adam Conover, wherever you get your social media, including Adam ruins tick tock on tick tock. All right. Thank you so much for listening. We'll see you next time. Stay curious. That was a hate gun podcast.

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