死亡率、工作和移徙。1861-1901年苏格兰结核病的年龄特异性死亡率分析。

A. Reid, E. Garrett
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引用次数: 7

摘要

本文对19世纪关于结核病死亡率的一些最持久的辩论进行了研究:与性别、地理和时间变化有关的辩论。我们使用了从1861年至1901年期间的个人人口普查和民事登记数据重建的人口,比较了不断增长的城市地区和不断下降的农村地区,1861年都有大约2万居民。我们的分析表明,在年轻人中,结核病与城市地区过高的女性死亡率和农村地区过高的男性死亡率有关。我们证明,在城镇中,男女纺织工人的结核病死亡率都特别高,而女性总体死亡率较高的唯一原因是纺织劳动力中年轻女性占主导地位。我们表明,农村地区的年龄和性别死亡率模式与男性向外迁移高于女性以及在其他地方感染该疾病并在长期患病期间需要护理的人的返回迁移相一致。我们认为,观察到的模式很难与结核病死亡率性别模式的“讨价还价-营养”解释相一致,并且它们很少支持营养是对疾病的关键影响。然而,我们的发现确实加强了Andrew Hinde最近的观点,即性别结核病死亡率的地理模式在很大程度上取决于迁移模式,我们讨论了这对我们理解19世纪晚期结核病下降的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mortality, Work and Migration. A Consideration of Age-specific Mortality from Tuberculosis in Scotland, 1861-1901.
This paper provides an examination into some of the most enduring debates regarding tuberculosis mortality during the nineteenth century: those related to gender, geographic and temporal variations. We use populations reconstructed from individual census and civil register data for the period 1861 to 1901, comparing a growing urban area with a declining rural area, both with around 20,000 inhabitants in 1861. Our analysis shows that among young adults tuberculosis was linked to excess female mortality in the urban area and excess male mortality in the rural area. We demonstrate that in the town textile workers of both genders had particularly high mortality from tuberculosis, and that the only reason for higher overall female mortality was the predominance of young women in the textile labour force. We show that the age and gender-specific pattern of mortality in the rural area is consistent with higher male than female out-migration together with return migration of those who had contracted the disease elsewhere and needed care during their lengthy illness. We argue that the observed patterns are difficult to reconcile with the 'bargaining-nutrition' account of gendered patterns in tuberculosis mortality, and that they provide little support for nutrition as a key influence on the disease. However, our findings do reinforce Andrew Hinde's recent argument that geographical patterns in sex-specific tuberculosis mortality rates were largely determined by migration patterns, and we discuss the implications of this for our understanding of the decline of the disease over the late nineteenth century.
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