Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine
Knaggs, deals
briefly month by month, and according as space
permits, with questions
of general interest to health seekers and others.
In all Queries relating to health difficulties
it is essential that
full details of the correspondent’s customary
diet should be clearly
given.
Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on one side only of the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._—[EDS.]
EXCESSIVE PERSPIRATION.
Miss R.E.N. writes.—I am troubled with excessive perspiration. I neither eat meat nor drink tea. I have a cold sponge bath down to my waist every morning, and I change all my clothes when I go to bed. My diet is, roughly, as follows:
Breakfast.—Oatmeal
porridge with toast or bread and jam or
golden syrup. Hot
water.
Lunch.—Peas, beans or lentils, eggs, cheese. Vegetables: potatoes and onions, or carrots, cabbage, cauliflower, turnips. Puddings, fruit or milk wholemeal bread, not much sugar except for sweetening fruits, etc.
Tea meal.—Wholemeal
bread and butter, nuts, jam, cake, pastry;
hot water.
At bedtime.—Hot water or coffee.
If our correspondent wishes to remedy this excessive perspiration she must get a hot towel-bath daily (all over),[14] wearing porous linen-mesh underclothing next the skin. She should also discontinue the soft sugary and starchy foods, and not mix fruit with other foods (it is best taken by itself, say, for breakfast). She needs more of the cooling salad vegetables. The following diet would be a great improvement:—
On rising.—Half-pint of hot boiled water, sipped slowly.
Breakfast.—Wholemeal bread
or biscuits and butter (all made
without salt), with salad or grated raw roots.
Stop porridge, jam and
golden syrup. Avoid drinking at meals.
Lunch.—Two eggs, or 2 oz. of curd cheese. Two vegetables cooked in casserole without salt; wholemeal bread or biscuits and butter; a few figs, prunes, dried bananas, or raisins, washed but not cooked. Avoid milk puddings or stewed fruits as too fermentative and heating.
Supper meal.—1 to 2 oz. flaked
nuts, some crisp “P.R.” or “Ixion”
biscuits with nut butter. Some fresh salad
or grated roots. Stop jam,
cake and pastry.
At bedtime.—Half-pint of hot
boiled water, or clear vegetable soup,
sipped slowly.
[14] The Sanum Oxygen Baths are also excellent in a case of this kind.
DIET FOR ULCERATED THROAT.
Mrs L.B. writes.—Do
you think it would be wise for a person
suffering from ulcers
in the throat and on other mucous membranes
to adopt a diet devoid
of meat, yeast and salt?