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(1)
England and Wales
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(1)
Reasons for the Decline of Mortality in England and Wales during the Nineteenth Century
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An Interpretation of the Decline of Mortality in England and Wales During the Twentieth Century
An Interpretation of the Decline of Mortality in England and Wales During the Twentieth Century,Thomas Mckeown,R. G. Record,R. D. Turner
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An Interpretation of the Decline of Mortality in England and Wales During the Twentieth Century
(
Citations: 51
)
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Thomas Mckeown
,
R. G. Record
,
R. D. Turner
Published in 1976.
Cumulative
Annual
Citation Context
(4)
...In England and Wales, for example, infectious diseases accounted for 55% of all deaths in 1901, but only 18% in 1961 (
McKeown et al., 1975
)...
Andrew Leigh
,
et al.
Inequality and mortality: Long-run evidence from a panel of countries
...Similar figures were reported for England and Wales.
...
Johan P Mackenbach
.
Sanitation: pragmatism works
...This long and strong tradition of rigorous scholarly work has provided sound argument based on solid evidence for reform within public health (Geronimus,
2000
; McKeown,
1975
), medicine (Leon, Walt, & Gilson,
2001
; Mackenbach & Bakker,
2003
) and social policy (Black, Morris, Smith, & Townsend,
1980
; Kawachi, Daniels, & Robinson,
2005
; Wilkinson,
1996
)...
Ignacio Correa-Velez
,
et al.
When the right to be counted doesn’t count: The politics and challenge...
...McKeown’s explanation of the decline of mortality throughout Europe since the eighteenth century has been widely accepted, even in medical circles, despite his minimization of medicine’s contribution before the advent of antibiotics in the 1930s (McKeown and Brown 1955; McKeown and Record 1962; McKeown et al. 1972;
McKeown, Record and Turner 1975
)...
Peter Aaby
.
Lessons for the past: Third World evidence and the reinterpretation of...
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