Literature DB >> 23667286

Immigration, Wealth and the 'Mortality Plateau' in Emergent Urban-Industrial Towns of Nineteenth-Century Massachusetts.

Susan Hautaniemi Leonard1, Jeffrey K Beemer, Douglas L Anderton.   

Abstract

The mortality transition in Western Europe and the U.S. encompassed a much more complex set of conditions and experiences than earlier thought. Our research addresses the complex set of relationships among growing urban communities, family wealth, immigration and mortality in New England by examining individual-level, socio-demographic mortality correlates during the nineteenth-century mortality plateau and its early twentieth-century decline. In contrast to earlier theories that proposed a more uniform mortality transition, we offer an alternative hypothesis that focuses on the impact of family wealth and immigration on individual-level mortality during the early stages of the mortality transition in Northampton and Holyoke, Massachusetts.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Census; Epidemiological transition; Health; Healthy worker; Holyoke; Immigration; Massachusetts; Mortality; Northampton; Wealth

Year:  2012        PMID: 23667286      PMCID: PMC3650859          DOI: 10.1017/S0268416012000215

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Contin Chang        ISSN: 0268-4160


  31 in total

1.  Mortality in rural America, 1870-1920: estimates and conjectures.

Authors:  R Higgs
Journal:  Explor Econ Hist       Date:  1973

2.  Mortality in Quebec during the nineteenth century: from the state to the cities.

Authors:  F Pelletier; J Legare; R Bourbeau
Journal:  Popul Stud (Camb)       Date:  1997-03

3.  Population studies of mortality.

Authors:  S H Preston
Journal:  Popul Stud (Camb)       Date:  1996-11

4.  Income, public works, and mortality in early twentieth-century American cities.

Authors:  K C Gaspari; A G Woolf
Journal:  J Econ Hist       Date:  1985

5.  The decline in mortality in Philadelphia from 1870 to 1930: the role of municipal services.

Authors:  G A Condran; H Williams; R A Cheney
Journal:  Pa Mag Hist Biogr       Date:  1984

6.  Immigration, mortality, and population growth in Boston, 1840-1880.

Authors:  R A Meckel
Journal:  J Interdiscip Hist       Date:  1985

7.  Mortality variation in U.S. cities in 1900: a two-level explanation by cause of death and underlying factors.

Authors:  E M Crimmins; G A Condran
Journal:  Soc Sci Hist       Date:  1983

8.  Urban French mortality in the nineteenth century.

Authors:  S H Preston; E Van de Walle
Journal:  Popul Stud (Camb)       Date:  1978-07

9.  Methods and validity of a panel study using record linkage: matching death records to a geographic census sample in two Massachusetts towns, 1850-1912.

Authors:  S I Hautaniemi; D L Anderton; A Swedlund
Journal:  Hist Methods       Date:  2000

10.  Recent trends in sex mortality ratios for adults in developed countries.

Authors:  I Waldron
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1993-02       Impact factor: 4.634

View more
  2 in total

1.  Immigration, Occupation and Inequality in Emergent Nineteenth-Century New England Cities.

Authors:  Susan Hautaniemi Leonard; Christopher Robinson; Douglas L Anderton
Journal:  Soc Sci Hist       Date:  2017-10-13

2.  The effects of wealth, occupation, and immigration on epidemic mortality from selected infectious diseases and epidemics in Holyoke township, Massachusetts, 1850-1912.

Authors:  Susan Hautaniemi Leonard; Christopher Robinson; Alan C Swedlund; Douglas L Anderton
Journal:  Demogr Res       Date:  2015-11-12
  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.