Decreasing human body temperature in the United States since the Industrial Revolution

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Abstract

ABSTRACT In the US, the normal, oral temperature of adults is, on average, lower than the canonical 37°C established in the 19 th century. We postulated that body temperature has decreased over time. Using measurements from three cohorts--the Union Army Veterans of the Civil War (N=23,710; measurement years 1860-1940), the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I (N=15,301; 1971-1975), and the Stanford Translational Research Integrated Database Environment (N=150,280; 2007-2017)--we determined that mean body temperature in men and women, after adjusting for age, height, weight and, in some models date and time of day, has decreased monotonically by 0.03°C per birth decade. A similar decline within the Union Army cohort as between cohorts, makes measurement error an unlikely explanation. This substantive and continuing shift in body temperature—a marker for metabolic rate—provides a framework for understanding changes in body habitus and human longevity over the last 200 years.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00