Carregant...
Miniatura

Tipus de document

Article

Versió

Versió acceptada

Data de publicació

Llicència de publicació

cc-by-nc-nd (c) Elsevier, 2024
Si us plau utilitzeu sempre aquest identificador per citar o enllaçar aquest document: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/207238

Socioeconomic Mortality Differences during the Great Influenza in Spain

Títol de la revista

Director/Tutor

ISSN de la revista

Títol del volum

Resum

Despite being one of the deadliest viruses in history, there is limited information on the socioeconomic factors that affected mortality rates during the Great Influenza Pandemic. In this study, we use occupation-province level data to investigate the relationship between influenza excess mortality rates and occupation-related status in Spain. We obtain three main results. Firstly, individuals in low-income occupations experienced the highest excess mortality, pointing to a notable income gradient. Secondly, professions that involved more social interaction were associated with a higher excess of mortality, regardless of income. Finally, we observe a substantial rural mortality penalty, even after controlling for income-related occupational groups. Based on this evidence, it seems that the high number of deaths was caused by not self-isolating. Some individuals did not quarantine themselves because they could not afford to miss work. In rural areas, home confinement was likely more limited because their inhabitants did not have immediate access to information about the pandemic or fully understand its impact due to their limited experience handling influenza outbreaks

Citació

Citació

BASCO, Sergi, DOMÈNECH FELIU, Jordi, ROSÉS, Joan ramon. Socioeconomic Mortality Differences during the Great Influenza in Spain. _Economics & Human Biology_. 2024. Vol. 52. [consulta: 9 de gener de 2026]. ISSN: 1570-677X. [Disponible a: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/207238]

Exportar metadades

JSON - METS

Compartir registre