This article presents new evidence on long-term trends in sickness rates in England and Wales using data from the Hampshire Friendly Society. In previous work, Edwards, Gorsky, Harris, and Hinde argued that this Society contained a uniquely detailed set of records for the study of individual sickness histories. However, their initial findings were based on the records of a relatively small number of men who joined the Society at different points in time between 1871 and 1912. The current article draws on a much larger body of evidence, based on the records of over 5,500 men who joined between 1824 and 1939. It examines trends in the seasonality of sickness episodes, changes in the relationship between sickness and age, and cause-specific si...
In the later decades of the nineteenth century, the United Kingdom experienced a shift in the causes...
Using adult life-long histories of health experience among a group of men and women born in Britain ...
Using adult life-long histories of health experience among a group of men and women born in Britain ...
This article presents new evidence on long-term trends in sickness rates in England and Wales using ...
This article presents new evidence on long-term trends in sickness rates in England and Wales using ...
This article presents new evidence on long-term trends in sickness rates in England and Wales using ...
We examine the relationship between age, sickness, and longevity among men who were members of the H...
We examine the relationship between age, sickness, and longevity among men who were members of the H...
We examine the relationship between age, sickness and longevity among men who were members of the Ha...
During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, a large number of working-class men (and a much small...
During the last twenty years, social and demographic historians have used a variety of approaches to...
Using data from the Hampshire Friendly Society, a sickness insurance institution in southern England...
During the last twenty years, economic and social historians have become increasingly interested in ...
During the second half of the nineteenth century, friendly-society actuaries became increasingly con...
During the second half of the nineteenth century, friendly-society actuaries became increasingly con...
In the later decades of the nineteenth century, the United Kingdom experienced a shift in the causes...
Using adult life-long histories of health experience among a group of men and women born in Britain ...
Using adult life-long histories of health experience among a group of men and women born in Britain ...
This article presents new evidence on long-term trends in sickness rates in England and Wales using ...
This article presents new evidence on long-term trends in sickness rates in England and Wales using ...
This article presents new evidence on long-term trends in sickness rates in England and Wales using ...
We examine the relationship between age, sickness, and longevity among men who were members of the H...
We examine the relationship between age, sickness, and longevity among men who were members of the H...
We examine the relationship between age, sickness and longevity among men who were members of the Ha...
During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, a large number of working-class men (and a much small...
During the last twenty years, social and demographic historians have used a variety of approaches to...
Using data from the Hampshire Friendly Society, a sickness insurance institution in southern England...
During the last twenty years, economic and social historians have become increasingly interested in ...
During the second half of the nineteenth century, friendly-society actuaries became increasingly con...
During the second half of the nineteenth century, friendly-society actuaries became increasingly con...
In the later decades of the nineteenth century, the United Kingdom experienced a shift in the causes...
Using adult life-long histories of health experience among a group of men and women born in Britain ...
Using adult life-long histories of health experience among a group of men and women born in Britain ...