| Literature DB >> 23667286 |
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