13 - 18世纪柏林气候变化与城市发展交叉点的差异死亡率趋势

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Emily J. Brennan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究的目的是评估中世纪晚期(约1200-1500年)和现代早期(约1500-1800年)柏林在气候变化和城市化交叉点的成人死亡风险差异。公元1200年城市建立后,近代早期人口密度增加,小冰期(LIA)到来,漫长的冬季和潮湿的夏季破坏了农作物产量。为了验证死亡风险在现代早期增加的假设,本研究检查了约1200年至1717年柏林成年个体(n = 274)的Gompertz和Gompertz- makeham死亡率曲线。为了评估不同时期和性别死亡率差异的程度,采用了Cox比例风险分析。结果与中世纪晚期相比,现代早期所有成年人面临的死亡风险都有所降低。在这两个时期,估计女性面临的死亡风险高于估计男性,尽管这种差异仅在现代早期具有统计学意义。死亡率风险的降低可能表明城市生活的保护作用,即使与LIA的气候变化。近代早期,公立医院大量增加,医学出版物增多。据估计,当时女性的死亡率较高,这可能是受不同教育和宗教紧张局势加剧导致巫术迫害的结果,可能影响到当时妇女健康的社会决定因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Differential Mortality Trends at the Intersection of Climate Change and Urban Growth From 13th to 18th Century Berlin

Differential Mortality Trends at the Intersection of Climate Change and Urban Growth From 13th to 18th Century Berlin

Objectives

The purpose of this study is to evaluate differences in adult mortality risk at the intersection of climate change and urbanization between late medieval (c. 1200–1500) and early modern (c. 1500–1800) Berlin. After the founding of the city in c. 1200, the early modern period saw increased population density and the advent of the Little Ice Age (LIA), whose long winters and wet summers destroyed crop yields.

Materials and Methods

To test the hypothesis that mortality risk increased in the early modern period, this study examined Gompertz and Gompertz-Makeham mortality curves for adult individuals (n = 274) dated from c. 1200 to 1717 Berlin. To evaluate the magnitude of differences in mortality by time period and estimated sex, a Cox Proportional Hazards analysis was used.

Results

All adults faced a decreased risk of mortality in the early modern period compared to the late medieval period. In both time periods, estimated females faced a higher risk of mortality compared to estimated males, though this difference was only statistically significant in the early modern period.

Discussion

Decreased risk of mortality may indicate protective effects of urban life, even with the climatic variability of the LIA. The early modern period saw the proliferation of public hospitals and an increase in medical publications. Higher mortality risks for estimated females at this time may be a result of differential education and heightened religious tensions that resulted in witchcraft persecutions, possibly affecting social determinants of health for women at the time.

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