Publication | Closed Access
Early Death: Mortality among Young Children in New York, Chicago, and New Orleans
22
Citations
14
References
2004
Year
Mortality StudiesUrban HealthEngineeringPopulation ScienceWaste DisposalMortality RatesNew YorkSocial Determinants Of HealthLifetime PredictionEnvironmental HealthExcess Summer MortalityUrban HistoryPublic HealthEarly Life ExposureLife ExpectancyEarly Childhood DevelopmentEarly DeathEpidemiologyChild DevelopmentChild HealthPediatricsYoung ChildrenDemographyTrauma In Child
The high mortality of nineteenth-century cities included excess summer mortality among infants and young children. Data from New York City, New Or-leans, and Chicago from 1870 to 1917 and earlier data from New York City permit an examination of this high summer mortality and its decline during the early twentieth century in relation to changes in infant feeding practices, sanitation projects to improve water supplies and methods of waste disposal, and efforts to improve the quality of milk.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1