Titre : | A health transition : Birth weights, households and survival in an Australian working-class population sample born 1857-1900. (2008) |
Auteurs : | MCCALMAN (Janet) : AUS. School of Population Health. University of Melbourne. Victoria. ; MISHRA (Gita) : GBR. Mrc National Survey of Health and Development. Department of Epidemiology and Public Health. University College London. ; MORLEY (Ruth) : AUS. Clinical and Biostatistics Unit. Murdoch Children's Research Institute. Royal Children's Hospital. Melbourne. |
Type de document : | Article |
Dans : | Social science and medicine (vol. 66, n° 5, 2008) |
Pagination : | 1070-1083 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Mots-clés : | Poids naissance ; Ménage ; Survie ; Australie ; Classe sociale ; Ouvrier ; Facteur socioéconomique ; Population ; Nourrisson ; Mortalité ; Epidémiologie ; Adulte ; Longévité ; Economie descriptive ; Océanie ; Homme |
Résumé : | [BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS EWltR0xr. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. There is increasing interest in life course epidemiology. In this article we investigated the relationship between characteristics at birth and survival and year of birth and survival. We have detailed information about birth characteristics and cause of death for 8584 subjects from a cohort of 16,272 registered live births to European Australians in a charity hospital in Melbourne between 1857 and 1900. Women giving birth at the hospital were among the poorest in Melbourne, with almost half unmarried. The adult death certificates of the subjects were traced until 1985. We found that infant mortality was substantially higher in babies who were illegitimate, firstborn, had younger mothers, a birth weight |