呼吸时间:对瑞士呼吸系统疾病和空气传播疾病的长期多学科研究(公元 16 世纪至 21 世纪)。

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Tobias Hofstetter, Aude Fauvel, Silke Grabherr, Negahnaz Moghaddam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这项研究是首次评估呼吸道疾病和空气传播疾病(以下缩写为 "RIAD")在公元 16 世纪至 21 世纪期间对瑞士人死亡率的长期影响。该研究回顾了历史、人口学、统计学、医学和生物考古学方面的主要和次要数据,这些数据来源于档案资料或之前发表的对该主题的具体分析(n = 55)。为了理解、收集、组织和分析来自多个不同学科领域的数据,我们开发了一种创新的交叉和多学科方法。通过这种方法,本研究致力于回答以下问题:1)哪些社会和环境因素会影响人们是否有可能罹患里亚德,2)这些因素在地域范围内和时间上是否恒定不变,3)里亚德发生率的演变是否与特定地区的地方历史相关联?4)更好地了解过去的旱地退化评估动态是否有助于我们为今后的可持续管理吸取有用的经验教训?因此,我们将收集到的原始数据转换并归一化为每千人的粗死亡率、出生率和里亚德死亡率,然后将其设置为人口和流行病学过渡模型。该模型是理解本研究强调的病理和人口演变的相关阅读网格。事实上,通过数据汇编工作,我们得以重建瑞士从公元 1580 年至今的粗出生率和死亡率,并以图表形式展示后者。这种图表展示方式是瑞士 RIAD 研究领域的一个突破,并进一步通过连接点回归分析评估了内部数据的一致性和趋势演变。主要结果包括证实了工业化对高山周边地区居民呼吸系统健康的巨大影响。这些结果还强调了呼吸系统疾病对特定社会经济和人口阶层造成的压力的选择性和多变性,这些阶层的构成随着时间的推移而变化。由于现有资料的质量参差不齐,这项研究受到了阻碍。尽管如此,它仍然为呼吸系统健康的长期演变提供了可靠的展望。因此,这项研究的结果可能会引起长期活跃在呼吸系统疾病研究领域的众多学者以及临床医生和卫生政策制定者的兴趣,因为这项研究强调了当前卫生状况的某些方面,以及未来全球范围内尤其是全球城市化对呼吸系统健康问题带来的挑战。未来的研究可以在邻近地区开发类似的方法,或侧重于特定类型的 RIAD,以便将其他地方的病理特征与本手稿中介绍的病理特征进行对比。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Breathing time: a longue-durée multidisciplinary study of respiratory illnesses and airborne diseases in Switzerland (16th-21st century CE).

This research is the first of its kind to assess of the impact of respiratory illnesses and airborne diseases (acronymized as "RIAD" hereafter) on Swiss mortality in the long run, between the 16th and the 21st century CE. It reviews historical, demographical, statistical, medical, and bioarchaeological, primary and secondary data originating from archive material or previously published specific analyses into the topic (n = 55). An innovative intersectional and multidisciplinary approach was developed in order to apprehend, collect, organize, and analyze data stemming from several different disciplinary fields. Through this approach, this research endeavors to answer the following questions: 1) what are the social and environmental factors guiding the risk or not of suffering from RIAD, 2) do these factors appear to be constant on a territorial scale and through time, 3) can the evolution of RIAD occurrences be correlated to the local history of a particular region? And 4) does a better understanding of RIAD dynamics in the past allow us to draw any useful lessons for their future sustainable management? Accordingly, collected raw data were converted and normalized into crude mortality, natality, and RIAD mortality rates per thousand individuals and subsequently set within the demographic and epidemiological transition model. This model serves as a relevant reading grid for the understanding of the pathological and demographic evolutions that this study highlights. Indeed, this data compilation effort enabled to reconstruct crude birth and death rates for Switzerland from 1580 CE to the present day and to present the latter in graphical form. This graphical presentation is a breakthrough in the field of RIAD research in Switzerland and further enabled to assess internal data coherence and trend evolutions by means of joinpoint regression analysis. Main results include the confirmation of the considerable impact of industrialization on the respiratory health of peri-alpine populations. They also underline the selective and versatile nature of the pressure exerted by respiratory diseases on specific socio-economic and demographic classes, whose composition has varied through time. This research was impeded by the uneven quality of the available sources. Nonetheless, it still provides a robust outlook on the longue-durée evolution of respiratory health. The obtained results might thus be of interest to a wide array of scholars active in the study of respiratory diseases through time, but also clinicians and health policy makers, as this study highlights particular aspect of the current health situation, and the future worldwide challenges posed notably by global urbanization, with regard to respiratory health issues. Future research could develop similar approaches in neighboring regions, or focus on specific types of RIAD, in order to contrast other local pathological signatures with the one presented in this manuscript.

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