The purpose of this research was to test the hypothesis that environmental factors made a greater contribution to the differential decline in infant mortality during the early Twentieth Century than did improvements in the standard of 1iving.Infant mortality levels were estimated from retrospective reports of currently married cohabiting women under 45 years of age, who were enumerated in the 1911 Census of England and Vales. They span the period from approximately 1895 to 1910. Material in the published tables are used to create two data sets, one in which the unit of disaggregation was husband's occupation and the other in which it was place of enumeration, for towns, cities and urban districts with fifty thousand or more inhabitants in 1...
This thesis began as part of wider project undertaken by postgraduate students of the Open Universit...
The study of nineteenth-century infant mortality in Britain has neglected the rural dimension to a s...
Following the appointment of a Medical Officer of Health for Birmingham, concern was frequently expr...
According to civil registration data for England & Wales there was little or no change in the infant...
This study forms part of a larger research project investigating the causes for the decline in infan...
It is the aim of this thesis to examine the infant mortality rate within the Bexley Sub-Registration...
This research, which was conducted as part of a nation-wide project, concerns the structure of infan...
The recorded decline in Infant Mortality Rates from the mid nineteenth Century onwards has been attr...
As part of a wider Open University project investigating the decline in infant mortality, 1875-1948,...
The study of nineteenth-century infant mortality in Britain has neglected the rural dimension to a s...
The causes of the retardation of the infant mortality decline in the latter part of the nineteenth c...
This article presents a substantive analysis using the Great Britain Historical Geographical Informa...
This paper considers the changing spatial pattern of infant mortality in England and Wales over the ...
This chapter aims to add to our understanding of the relationship between different demographic comp...
BACKGROUND Considerable regional variation existed in 19th century infant mortality (IMR) in England...
This thesis began as part of wider project undertaken by postgraduate students of the Open Universit...
The study of nineteenth-century infant mortality in Britain has neglected the rural dimension to a s...
Following the appointment of a Medical Officer of Health for Birmingham, concern was frequently expr...
According to civil registration data for England & Wales there was little or no change in the infant...
This study forms part of a larger research project investigating the causes for the decline in infan...
It is the aim of this thesis to examine the infant mortality rate within the Bexley Sub-Registration...
This research, which was conducted as part of a nation-wide project, concerns the structure of infan...
The recorded decline in Infant Mortality Rates from the mid nineteenth Century onwards has been attr...
As part of a wider Open University project investigating the decline in infant mortality, 1875-1948,...
The study of nineteenth-century infant mortality in Britain has neglected the rural dimension to a s...
The causes of the retardation of the infant mortality decline in the latter part of the nineteenth c...
This article presents a substantive analysis using the Great Britain Historical Geographical Informa...
This paper considers the changing spatial pattern of infant mortality in England and Wales over the ...
This chapter aims to add to our understanding of the relationship between different demographic comp...
BACKGROUND Considerable regional variation existed in 19th century infant mortality (IMR) in England...
This thesis began as part of wider project undertaken by postgraduate students of the Open Universit...
The study of nineteenth-century infant mortality in Britain has neglected the rural dimension to a s...
Following the appointment of a Medical Officer of Health for Birmingham, concern was frequently expr...