Cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen 1861-1911 explored using individual level data: What was Killing Babies? European Comparative Research using Individual Level Causes of Death

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Standard

Cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen 1861-1911 explored using individual level data : What was Killing Babies? European Comparative Research using Individual Level Causes of Death. / Ludvigsen, Louise Villefrance Isted; Løkke, Anne; Revuelta Eugercios, Barbara Ana.

I: Historical Life Course Studies, Bind 13, Nr. Special Issue 6, 2023, s. 9-43.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ludvigsen, LVI, Løkke, A & Revuelta Eugercios, BA 2023, 'Cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen 1861-1911 explored using individual level data: What was Killing Babies? European Comparative Research using Individual Level Causes of Death', Historical Life Course Studies, bind 13, nr. Special Issue 6, s. 9-43. https://doi.org/10.51964/hlcs12032

APA

Ludvigsen, L. V. I., Løkke, A., & Revuelta Eugercios, B. A. (2023). Cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen 1861-1911 explored using individual level data: What was Killing Babies? European Comparative Research using Individual Level Causes of Death. Historical Life Course Studies, 13(Special Issue 6), 9-43. https://doi.org/10.51964/hlcs12032

Vancouver

Ludvigsen LVI, Løkke A, Revuelta Eugercios BA. Cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen 1861-1911 explored using individual level data: What was Killing Babies? European Comparative Research using Individual Level Causes of Death. Historical Life Course Studies. 2023;13(Special Issue 6):9-43. https://doi.org/10.51964/hlcs12032

Author

Ludvigsen, Louise Villefrance Isted ; Løkke, Anne ; Revuelta Eugercios, Barbara Ana. / Cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen 1861-1911 explored using individual level data : What was Killing Babies? European Comparative Research using Individual Level Causes of Death. I: Historical Life Course Studies. 2023 ; Bind 13, Nr. Special Issue 6. s. 9-43.

Bibtex

@article{3218a8618a414700be920151d44158eb,
title = "Cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen 1861-1911 explored using individual level data: What was Killing Babies? European Comparative Research using Individual Level Causes of Death",
abstract = "This study explores cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen between 1861 and 1911, using newly available individual-level data from The Copenhagen Burial Register, as part of a larger comparative project within the SHiP network (Studying the history of Health in Port Cities). The aim is to determine the dominant cause of death patterns for infants and to explore how the ICD10h coding system performs with the Danish individual level-historical causes of death. The results show that in Copenhagen, infant mortality began a distinct decline during the period of study (1861–1911), but the city experienced only very few changes in the cause of death pattern. While a transition from symptomatic to more specific causes of death took place over time, the largest killers overall were the water-food borne and airborne diseases, with a respectively summer and winter peak. The airborne and water-food borne diseases were mainly dominant amongst the post-neonates, whose mortality made up an increasingly larger share of infant deaths. Finally, the results show that although coding the Danish causes of death to the ICD10h has proven successful, more attention needs to be paid to different uses of the same cause of death by different nations, such as the case of atrophy.",
author = "Ludvigsen, {Louise Villefrance Isted} and Anne L{\o}kke and {Revuelta Eugercios}, {Barbara Ana}",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.51964/hlcs12032",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "9--43",
journal = "Historical Life Course Studies",
issn = "2352-6343",
publisher = "International Institute of Social History",
number = "Special Issue 6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen 1861-1911 explored using individual level data

T2 - What was Killing Babies? European Comparative Research using Individual Level Causes of Death

AU - Ludvigsen, Louise Villefrance Isted

AU - Løkke, Anne

AU - Revuelta Eugercios, Barbara Ana

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - This study explores cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen between 1861 and 1911, using newly available individual-level data from The Copenhagen Burial Register, as part of a larger comparative project within the SHiP network (Studying the history of Health in Port Cities). The aim is to determine the dominant cause of death patterns for infants and to explore how the ICD10h coding system performs with the Danish individual level-historical causes of death. The results show that in Copenhagen, infant mortality began a distinct decline during the period of study (1861–1911), but the city experienced only very few changes in the cause of death pattern. While a transition from symptomatic to more specific causes of death took place over time, the largest killers overall were the water-food borne and airborne diseases, with a respectively summer and winter peak. The airborne and water-food borne diseases were mainly dominant amongst the post-neonates, whose mortality made up an increasingly larger share of infant deaths. Finally, the results show that although coding the Danish causes of death to the ICD10h has proven successful, more attention needs to be paid to different uses of the same cause of death by different nations, such as the case of atrophy.

AB - This study explores cause-specific infant mortality in Copenhagen between 1861 and 1911, using newly available individual-level data from The Copenhagen Burial Register, as part of a larger comparative project within the SHiP network (Studying the history of Health in Port Cities). The aim is to determine the dominant cause of death patterns for infants and to explore how the ICD10h coding system performs with the Danish individual level-historical causes of death. The results show that in Copenhagen, infant mortality began a distinct decline during the period of study (1861–1911), but the city experienced only very few changes in the cause of death pattern. While a transition from symptomatic to more specific causes of death took place over time, the largest killers overall were the water-food borne and airborne diseases, with a respectively summer and winter peak. The airborne and water-food borne diseases were mainly dominant amongst the post-neonates, whose mortality made up an increasingly larger share of infant deaths. Finally, the results show that although coding the Danish causes of death to the ICD10h has proven successful, more attention needs to be paid to different uses of the same cause of death by different nations, such as the case of atrophy.

U2 - 10.51964/hlcs12032

DO - 10.51964/hlcs12032

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 9

EP - 43

JO - Historical Life Course Studies

JF - Historical Life Course Studies

SN - 2352-6343

IS - Special Issue 6

ER -

ID: 333623914