美国城市死亡率的转变,1800-1940

M. Haines
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引用次数: 221

摘要

在19世纪和20世纪初的美国,住在城市里会有大量的死亡率“惩罚”。其他国家也有同样的情况。到1940年左右,这种惩罚已基本取消,在许多情况下,住在城市比住在农村更健康。尽管在1933年以前缺乏系统的国家数据,但仍有可能描述城市死亡率转变的现象。19世纪早期,美国的城市化程度并不高(1800年只有6.1%),这种情况导致了相对有利的死亡率状况。全国粗死亡率很可能是每年每千人20-25人。一些早期数据表明,城市的死亡率要高得多,大城市的死亡率比小城市高,南方的死亡率比北方高。到1900年,美国城市人口比例约为40%(到1940年为56%)。在19世纪中期,死亡率,尤其是城市地区的死亡率,实际上是上升的(或者至少没有下降)。城市化程度的提高、交通和商业化的发展以及人口在全国范围内流动的增加都促成了这一趋势。快速的城市发展和对疾病过程的不充分的科学理解导致了19世纪早期和中期美国城市的死亡率危机。持续的死亡率转变直到19世纪70年代才开始。此后,城市死亡率的下降速度比农村地区更快,这得益于公共工程的重大改善和公共卫生的进步,最终是医学的进步。到20世纪40年代,大部分过程已经完成。城市刑罚已基本取消,死亡率继续下降,尽管城市人口比例继续增长。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Urban Mortality Transition in the United States, 1800-1940
In the United States in the 19th and early 20th centuries, there was a substantial mortality 'penalty' to living in urban places. This circumstance was shared with other nations. By around 1940, this penalty had been largely eliminated, and it was healthier, in many cases, to reside in the city than in the countryside. Despite the lack of systematic national data before 1933, it is possible to describe the phenomenon of the urban mortality transition. Early in the 19th century, the United States was not particularly urban (only 6.1% in 1800), a circumstance which led to a relatively favorable mortality situation. A national crude death rate of 20-25 per thousand per year would have been likely. Some early data indicate that mortality was substantially higher in cities, was higher in larger relative to smaller cities, and was higher in the South relative to the North. By 1900, the nation had become about 40% urban (and 56% by 1940). It appears that death rates, especially in urban areas, actually rose (or at least did not decline) over the middle of the 19th century. Increased urbanization, as well as developments in transport and commercialization and increased movements of people into and throughout the nation, contributed to this. Rapid urban growth and an inadequate scientific understanding of disease processes contributed to the mortality crisis of the early and middle nineteenth century in American cities. The sustained mortality transition only began about the 1870s. Thereafter the decline of urban mortality proceeded faster than in rural places, assisted by significant public works improvements and advances in public health and eventually medical science. Much of the process had been completed by the 1940s. The urban penalty had been largely eliminated and mortality continued to decline despite the continued growth in the urban share of the population.
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