EPIDEMIOLOGYDeprivation in infancy or in adult life: which is more important for mortality risk?
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Infant mortality and adult wellbeing: Evidence from wartime Britain
2019, Labour EconomicsCitation Excerpt :Barker and Osmond (1986) and Ben-Shlomo and Smith (1991) obtained associations between infant mortality and adult cause of death for birth cohorts born in England and Wales in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Although both studies found some evidence that higher rates of infant mortality were associated with higher rates of death, particularly from heart disease, associations were not consistent and adjusting for socioeconomic status eliminated significant associations (Ben-Shlomo and Smith, 1991). Similar studies using 19th century birth cohorts from countries other than England and Wales generally found evidence of scarring— birth cohorts that experienced relatively high rates of infant mortality experienced relatively high rates of adult mortality (Bengtsson and Lindstrom, 2000; Catalano and Bruckner, 2006; Crimmins and Finch, 2006; Bengtsson and Broström, 2009; Myrskylä, 2010; Schellekens and van Poppel, 2016).
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