DOI:10.1073/pnas.0611071104 - Corpus ID: 11280273
The effect of public health measures on the 1918 influenza pandemic in U.S. cities
@article{Bootsma2007TheEO, title={The effect of public health measures on the 1918 influenza pandemic in U.S. cities}, author={Martin C. J. Bootsma and Neil M. Ferguson}, journal={Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, year={2007}, volume={104}, pages={7588 - 7593}, url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:11280273}}- M. BootsmaN. Ferguson
- Published inProceedings of the National…1 May 2007
- Medicine, History
It is shown that city-specific per-capita excess mortality in 1918 was significantly correlated with 1917 per-Capita mortality, indicating some intrinsic variation in overall mortality, perhaps related to sociodemographic factors.
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It is shown that living in census tracts with higher illiteracy rates increased the risk of influenza and pneumonia mortality during the 1918 influenza pandemic in Chicago, and that disparities and their determinants should remain targets of research and control in future pandemics.
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Disparities in cross-city pandemic severity during the 1918 Influenza Pandemic remain poorly understood. This paper uses newly assembled historical data on annual mortality across 438 U.S. cities to…
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This study suggests that mortality associated with the 1918–20 influenza pandemic was in part predetermined by pre-pandemic pneumonia death rates in 66 large US cities, perhaps through the impact of the physical and social structure of each city.
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