In a recent article in the Review I challenged Szreter and Mooney’s account of a mortality crisis in English industrial and manufacturing cities in the period c.1830-1850. I argued that (1) there was no robust evidence for a major fall in urban life expectancies in this period; (2) there was evidence for a rise in mortality in early childhood, but this rise occurred in rural as well as urban populations, and persisted until the 1860s; and (3) an increase in virulence of scarlet fever made a major contribution to this rise. Szreter and Mooney contested these conclusions on two main grounds; that my methodology for estimating urban life expectancies differed from theirs; and that the geography and chronology of scarlet fever patterns did not ...
There was a marked rise in scarlet fever mortality in England and Wales in the mid-nineteenth centur...
Western nations experienced dramatic declines in mortality levels during the course of industrializa...
Throughout most parts of the world, mortality rates have fallen dramatically since the mid-nineteent...
Funder: The Leverhulme Trust and the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic ScienceAbstract: In a recent ...
Abstract: Romola Davenport's recent article is presented as a significant revision of the interpreta...
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...
Expectation of life at birth increased in Manchester from 27 years in 1841 to 31 years in 1861–70, f...
responses to our ‘Second Opinion ’ on ‘Infectious Disease and the Epidemiological Tran-sition in Vic...
Smallpox was probably the single most lethal disease in eighteenth-century Britain but was reduced t...
McKeown and Record's classification of the causes of the nineteenth- century mortality decline has...
The causes of the retardation of the infant mortality decline in the latter part of the nineteenth c...
Annual deaths from scarlet fever in Liverpool, UK during 1848-1900 have been used as a model system ...
This paper presents a new analysis of the contribution of particular causes of death to the decline ...
ObjectiveThis study tests the argument that industrialisation was accompanied by a dramatic worsenin...
There was a marked rise in scarlet fever mortality in England and Wales in the mid-nineteenth centur...
Western nations experienced dramatic declines in mortality levels during the course of industrializa...
Throughout most parts of the world, mortality rates have fallen dramatically since the mid-nineteent...
Funder: The Leverhulme Trust and the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic ScienceAbstract: In a recent ...
Abstract: Romola Davenport's recent article is presented as a significant revision of the interpreta...
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...
Expectation of life at birth increased in Manchester from 27 years in 1841 to 31 years in 1861–70, f...
responses to our ‘Second Opinion ’ on ‘Infectious Disease and the Epidemiological Tran-sition in Vic...
Smallpox was probably the single most lethal disease in eighteenth-century Britain but was reduced t...
McKeown and Record's classification of the causes of the nineteenth- century mortality decline has...
The causes of the retardation of the infant mortality decline in the latter part of the nineteenth c...
Annual deaths from scarlet fever in Liverpool, UK during 1848-1900 have been used as a model system ...
This paper presents a new analysis of the contribution of particular causes of death to the decline ...
ObjectiveThis study tests the argument that industrialisation was accompanied by a dramatic worsenin...
There was a marked rise in scarlet fever mortality in England and Wales in the mid-nineteenth centur...
Western nations experienced dramatic declines in mortality levels during the course of industrializa...
Throughout most parts of the world, mortality rates have fallen dramatically since the mid-nineteent...