There was a marked rise in scarlet fever mortality in England and Wales in the mid-nineteenth century and spectral analysis of the registration details, 1847-80, shows that the interepidemic interval was 5-6 years, but after 1880 the endemic level fell and the fatal epidemics disappeared. The dynamics of the scarlet fever epidemics can be represented by a linearized mathematical model and because the system is lightly damped, it could be driven by an oscillation in susceptibility. Epidemics were significantly correlated with dry conditions in spring/summer (P < 0.001), suggesting that these produced a low amplitude oscillation in susceptibility which drove the system. Epidemics also correlated (P < 0.001) with an oscillation in wheat prices...
We use individual records of 920,000 burials and 630,000 baptisms to reconstruct the spatial and tem...
Abstract. A model for the spread of an infectious disease in a population with constant recruit-ment...
At the end of the nineteenth century, the northern port of Liverpool had become the second largest i...
There was a marked rise in scarlet fever mortality in England and Wales in the mid-nineteenth centur...
Annual deaths from scarlet fever in Liverpool, UK during 1848-1900 have been used as a model system ...
Background. Scarlet fever, an infectious disease caused by Streptococcus pyogenes, largely disappear...
Background. Scarlet fever, an infectious disease caused by Streptococcus pyogenes, largely disappear...
The evolution of smallpox epidemics in London, 1647-1893, was studied by time series analysis of dea...
Time-series analysis, a valuable tool in studying population dynamics, has been used to determine th...
Time series analysis of the London Bills of Mortality, 1701-1812, reveals that whooping cough appear...
Abstract: Romola Davenport's recent article is presented as a significant revision of the interpreta...
Time series analysis has revealed two different patterns of smallpox epidemics in Britain in the sev...
Parish registers have been studied by time series analysis to detect smallpox epidemics in England d...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the Industrial Revolution, pessimists hav...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the industrial revolution, pessimists hav...
We use individual records of 920,000 burials and 630,000 baptisms to reconstruct the spatial and tem...
Abstract. A model for the spread of an infectious disease in a population with constant recruit-ment...
At the end of the nineteenth century, the northern port of Liverpool had become the second largest i...
There was a marked rise in scarlet fever mortality in England and Wales in the mid-nineteenth centur...
Annual deaths from scarlet fever in Liverpool, UK during 1848-1900 have been used as a model system ...
Background. Scarlet fever, an infectious disease caused by Streptococcus pyogenes, largely disappear...
Background. Scarlet fever, an infectious disease caused by Streptococcus pyogenes, largely disappear...
The evolution of smallpox epidemics in London, 1647-1893, was studied by time series analysis of dea...
Time-series analysis, a valuable tool in studying population dynamics, has been used to determine th...
Time series analysis of the London Bills of Mortality, 1701-1812, reveals that whooping cough appear...
Abstract: Romola Davenport's recent article is presented as a significant revision of the interpreta...
Time series analysis has revealed two different patterns of smallpox epidemics in Britain in the sev...
Parish registers have been studied by time series analysis to detect smallpox epidemics in England d...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the Industrial Revolution, pessimists hav...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the industrial revolution, pessimists hav...
We use individual records of 920,000 burials and 630,000 baptisms to reconstruct the spatial and tem...
Abstract. A model for the spread of an infectious disease in a population with constant recruit-ment...
At the end of the nineteenth century, the northern port of Liverpool had become the second largest i...