Mortality at early ages in Scottish communities, 1959–83: Geographical distributions and associations with selected socioeconomic indices
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Small area variations in infant mortality in England and Wales in the inter-war period and their link with socio-economic factors
2004, Health and PlaceCitation Excerpt :In the 1920s and 1930s localized housing shortages and poverty led to widespread overcrowding in sub-standard homes, with attendant health risks for both mothers and children (Jones, 1994), and Haines (1995) shows how, in 1911, lower socio-economic status and overcrowded housing acted cumulatively to raise infant mortality levels. Even recent studies of community variations in infant mortality show links with housing quality, as well as with social class per se (e.g. Williams and Lloyd, 1990; Shaw, 1984). While urban housing and deprivation have often been implicated in excess mortality, economic recession in the 1930s included rural areas, and remoter areas were also affected by poor access to improved health care, for instance in terms of nursing and equipment provision in rural infirmaries and cottage hospitals.
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2007, Journal of Children's ServicesTrends in inequality in infant mortality in the north of England, 1921-1973, and their association with urban and social structure
2005, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A: Statistics in Society