Literature DB >> 6642812

Mortality and economic instability: detailed analyses for Britain and comparative analyses for selected industrialized countries.

M H Brenner.   

Abstract

This paper discusses a first-stage analysis of the link of unemployment rates, as well as other economic, social and environmental health risk factors, to mortality rates in postwar Britain. The results presented represent part of an international study of the impact of economic change on mortality patterns in industrialized countries. The mortality patterns examined include total and infant mortality and (by cause) cardiovascular (total), cerebrovascular and heart disease, cirrhosis of the liver, and suicide, homicide and motor vehicle accidents. Among the most prominent factors that beneficially influence postwar mortality patterns in England/Wales and Scotland are economic growth and stability and health service availability. A principal detrimental factor to health is a high rate of unemployment. Additional factors that have an adverse influence on mortality rates are cigarette consumption and heavy alcohol use and unusually cold winter temperatures (especially in Scotland). The model of mortality that includes both economic changes and behavioral and environmental risk factors was successfully applied to infant mortality rates in the interwar period. In addition, the "simple" economic change model of mortality (using only economic indicators) was applied to other industrialized countries. In Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Sweden, the simple version of the economic change model could be successfully applied only if the analysis was begun before World War II; for analysis beginning in the postwar era, the more sophisticated economic change model, including behavioral and environmental risk factors, was required. In France, West Germany, Italy, and Spain, by contrast, some success was achieved using the simple economic change model.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6642812     DOI: 10.2190/6XA5-4W36-M8HR-NX1X

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Health Serv        ISSN: 0020-7314            Impact factor:   1.663


  9 in total

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5.  Suicide, unemployment and gender variations in the Western world 1964-1986. Are women in Anglo-phone countries protected from suicide?

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6.  Domestic violence and homicide antecedents.

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7.  [Unemployment and your health: long-term analysis for the German Federal Republic].

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8.  Involuntary job loss as a risk factor for subsequent myocardial infarction and stroke: findings from the Health and Retirement Survey.

Authors:  William T Gallo; Elizabeth H Bradley; Tracy A Falba; Joel A Dubin; Laura D Cramer; Sidney T Bogardus; Stanislav V Kasl
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9.  The social and economic determinants of suicide in Canadian provinces.

Authors:  João T Jalles; Martin A Andresen
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  9 in total

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