营养状况对历史传染病发病率的影响:来自伦敦育婴堂医院的证据,1892-1919

IF 1 3区 历史学 Q3 FAMILY STUDIES
Eric B. Schneider
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引用次数: 7

摘要

摘要在人类健康中,营养与发病率之间存在着复杂的相互关系。许多疾病会降低营养状况,但另一方面,营养状况低也会使个人更容易患上某些疾病和更严重的疾病。在引入抗生素和疫苗后确定的关于这些关系的现代证据,可能不适用于这些医疗技术出现之前的历史环境。本文使用了一项基于伦敦弃儿医院记录的历史队列研究,以确定儿童营养状况(以体重和身高为代表)对儿童感染五种传染病(麻疹、腮腺炎、风疹、水痘和百日咳)的几率以及这些疾病的病程的因果影响。我通过利用环境条件的随机性来确定因果关系,因为弃儿被从原来的家中带走,然后被寄养在伦敦附近的县的家庭中,后来又被送回伦敦的弃儿医院。我没有发现营养状况对感染这五种疾病的几率有任何影响,但我确实发现,营养状况对麻疹和腮腺炎的病程有着历史上重要的、统计上显著的影响。这些发现有三个含义。首先,这些疾病的历史发病率与营养状况无关,这意味着饥荒期间或哥伦比亚交流期间的不良营养状况不会影响流行病的传播。然而,这些事件中的营养不良可能加剧了麻疹的严重程度。其次,在过去150年中改善营养状况会降低麻疹和腮腺炎感染的严重程度,但不会影响百日咳死亡率的下降。最后,麻疹的选择性扑杀效果将大于百日咳,因为百日咳的严重程度与潜在的营养状况无关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The effect of nutritional status on historical infectious disease morbidity: evidence from the London Foundling Hospital, 1892-1919
ABSTRACT There is a complex inter-relationship between nutrition and morbidity in human health. Many diseases reduce nutritional status, but on the other hand, having low nutritional status is also known to make individuals more susceptible to certain diseases and to more serious illness. Modern evidence on these relationships, determined after the introduction of antibiotics and vaccines, may not be applicable to historical settings before these medical technologies were available. This paper uses a historical cohort study based on records from the London Foundling Hospital to determine the causal effect of nutritional status of children, proxied by weight- and height-for-age Z-scores, on the odds of contracting five infectious diseases of childhood (measles, mumps, rubella, chicken pox and whooping cough) and on sickness duration from these diseases. I identify a causal effect by exploiting the randomisation of environmental conditions as foundling children were removed from their original homes, then fostered with families in counties nearby London and later returned to the Foundling Hospital’s main site in London. I find no effect of nutritional status on the odds of contracting the five diseases, but I do find a historically important and statistically significant effect of nutritional status on sickness duration for measles and mumps. These findings have three implications. First, historical incidence of these diseases was unrelated to nutritional status, meaning that poor nutritional status during famines or during the Colombian Exchange did not affect the spread of epidemics. However, undernutrition in these events may have exacerbated measles severity. Second, improving nutritional status in the past 150 years would have reduced the severity of measles and mumps infections but not affect the decline in whooping cough mortality. Finally, selective culling effects from measles would be larger than those from whooping cough since whooping cough severity was not correlated with underlying nutritional status.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
10.00%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: The History of the Family: An International Quarterly makes a significant contribution by publishing works reflecting new developments in scholarship and by charting new directions in the historical study of the family. Further emphasizing the international developments in historical research on the family, the Quarterly encourages articles on comparative research across various cultures and societies in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Pacific Rim, in addition to Europe, the United States and Canada, as well as work in the context of global history.
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