Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T19:12:13.989Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Culture, Class, and Infant Mortality during the Swedish Mortality Transition, 1750-1850

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Extract

Until recently material factors had usually been regarded as the most important forces behind the great mortality decline in Western Europe during the last two centuries. Today, the discussion among historical demographers is much more diversified. Greater consideration is given to other factors than was previously. Predominant in several recent summaries is the argument that there was not one single cause of the mortality decline everywhere and in every age group (Brändstrom 1993; Health Transition Review 1991: 1-2; Mercer 1990; Schofield, et al., 1991; Sundin 1992a). One factor which has gained recognition especially in urban areas is the efforts by local and national agencies to improve hygienic conditions (Riley 1987). Cultural determinants of health have also received increased attention both in articles and monographs, especially in relation to mortality among infants and children (Johansson 1991; Preston and Haines 1991).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Social Science History Association 1995 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bengtsson, T. (1988) “Mortality and causes of death in Västanfors parish, Sweden, 1700-1925,” in Brändström, A. and Tedebrand, L. G. (eds.), Society, Health and Population During the Demographic Transition. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International: 461-93.Google Scholar
Bengtsson, T., and Lundh, C. (1992) “Child and infant mortality in the Nordic countries prior to 1900. Some methodological comments.” Report for seminar at the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population in Montreal 7-9 October 1992. Lund: Department of Economic History, University of Lund.Google Scholar
Berg, F. T. (1879) “Om årstidemas inflytelse på dödligheten.” Statistisk Tidskrift III. Stockholm: 1121.Google Scholar
Brändström, A. (1984) “De kärlekslösa mödrarna.” Spädbarnsdödligheten i Sverige under 1800-talet med särskild hansyn till Nedertorneå. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International. With an English Summary.Google Scholar
Brändström, A. (1993) “Infant mortality in Sweden —1750-1950 —past and present research into its decline” in Corsini, C. A. and Viazzo, P. P. (eds.), The Decline of Infant Mortality in Europe 1800-1950. Florence: UNICEF Institute degli Innocenti di Firenze: 1934.Google Scholar
Brändström, A., and Sundin, J. (1981) “Infant mortality in a changing society: The effects of child care in a Swedish parish 1820-1894,” in Brändström, A. and Sundin, J. (eds.), Tradition and Transition. Umeå: Demographic Data Base, University of Umeå: 67104.Google Scholar
Castensson, R., Löwgren, M. and Sundin, J. (1988) “Urban water supply and improvement of health conditions” in Brändström, A. and Tedebrand, L. G. (eds.), Society, Health and Population During the Demographic Transition. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International: 273-98.Google Scholar
Edvinsson, S. (1992) Den osunda staden. Sociala skillnader i dödlighet i 1800-talets Sundsvall. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International. With an English Summary.Google Scholar
Fridlizius, G. (1989) “The deformation of cohorts: Nineteenth century mortality decline in a generational perspective.” Scandinavian Economic History Review 37, 3: 317.Google Scholar
Fridlizius, G. (1993) “The mortality development of a port-town in a national perspective,” in Lee, W. R. (ed.), The Population Dynamics and Development of Western European Port Cities 1720-1939. Forthcoming.Google Scholar
Health Transition Review 1991-92.Google Scholar
Hellstenius, J. (1884) “Barnadödligheten i Västernorrlands och Jämtlands Iän 1860-1880.” Statistisk Tidskrift. Stockholm: 153-68.Google Scholar
Imhof, A. (1981) Die gewonnenen Jahre. München: Beck.Google Scholar
Jägervall, M. (1990) Nils Rosén von Rosenstein och hans lärobok i pediatrik. Lund: Studentlitteratur.Google Scholar
Johansson, S. R. (1991) “The health transition: The cultural inflation of morbidity during the decline of mortality.” Health Transition Review 1,1: 3968.Google Scholar
Kearns, W. R., et al. (1989) “The interaction of political and economic factors in the management of urban public health,” in Nelson, M. C. and Rogers, J. (eds.), Urbanisation and the Epidemiological Transition. Essays in social and demographic history 9. Uppsala: Department of History, University of Uppsala: 981.Google Scholar
Kintner, H., and Knodel, J. (1977) “The impact of breast feeding patterns on the biomet-rical analysis of infant mortality.” Demography 14, 4: 391409.Google Scholar
Knodel, J. (1988) Demographic Behaviour in the Past. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Larsson, M. (1993) Kroppens rationalisering. Folkhälsoupplysning under 1700-talets andra hälft. Stockholm: Department of Sociology, University of Stockholm.Google Scholar
Linnæus, C. (1732) Iter Lapponicum. Edited by von Platen, M. and von Sydow, C. O. (1965). Stockholm: Wahlström and Widstrand: 60.Google Scholar
Lithell, U-B (1981) Breast-feeding and Reproduction. Studies in marital fertility and infant mortality in 19th century Finland and Sweden. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International.Google Scholar
Lunn, P. G. (1991) “Nutrition, immunity and infection,” in Schofield, et al (eds.), The Decline of Mortality in Europe. Oxford: Clarendon Press: 131-45.Google Scholar
Martinius, S. (1977) Peasant Destinies. The History of 525 Swedes Born 1810-12. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International.Google Scholar
McKeown, T. (1976) The Modern Rise of Population. London: Arnold.Google Scholar
Mercer, A. (1990) Disease, Mortality and Population in Transition. Leicester: Leicester University Press.Google Scholar
Nelson, M. C., and Rogers, J. (1992) “The right to die. Anti-vaccination activity and the 1874 smallpox epidemic in Stockholm.” Social History of Medicine 5: 3.Google Scholar
Nilsson, H. (1994) Mot bättre hälsa. Dödlighet och hälsoarbete i Linköping 1860-1894. With an English Summary. Linköping: Linköping Studies in Art and Sciences, Department of Health and Society, University of Linköping.Google Scholar
Nordlund, A. (1992) “Spädbarnsdödligheten i Linköping 1676-1775.” Term paper. Linköping: Department of History, University of Linköping.Google Scholar
Preston, S., and Haines, M. (1991) Fatal Years: Child Mortality in Late Nineteenth-Century America. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Razzell, P. (1977) The conquest of smallpox. Firle, Sussex: Caliban Books.Google Scholar
Riley, J. C. (1987) The Eighteenth Century Campaign to Avoid Disease. New York: St. Martin's Press.Google Scholar
Schofield, R., and Reher, D. (1991) “The decline of mortality in Europe,” in Schofield, R. et al. (eds.), The Decline of Mortality in Europe. Oxford: Clarendon Press: 117.Google Scholar
Smith, D. C. (1991) “Mortality differentials before the health transition.” Health Transition Review 1: 2: 235-7.Google Scholar
Sundin, J. (1981) “Control, punishment and reconciliation. A case study of parish justice in Sweden before 1850,” in Brändström, A. and Sundin, J. (eds.), Tradition and Transition. Umeå: Demographic Data Base, University of Umeå: 965.Google Scholar
Sundin, J. (1992a) “The history of public health and prevention: Current Swedish research.” Social History of Medicine 5: 3: 517-24.Google Scholar
Sundin, J. (1992b) För Gud, Staten och Folket. Brott och rättskipning i Sverige 1600-1840. Rättshistoriskt bibliotek 47. Stockholm: Nordiska bokhandeln. With an English Summary.Google Scholar
Sundin, J., and Tedebrand, L-G (1981) “Mortality and morbidity in Swedish iron foundries 1750-1875,” in Brändström, A. and Sundin, J. (eds.), Tradition and Transition. Umeå: Demographic Data Base, University of Umeå: 105-59.Google Scholar
Winberg, C. (1975) Folkökning och proletarisering. Gothenburg: Department of History, University of Gothenburg. With an English Summary.Google Scholar
Woods, R., et al. (1993) “Infant mortality in England—1550–1950—Problems in the identification of long-term trends and geographical and social variations,” in Corsini, C. A. and Viazzo, P. P. (eds.), The Decline of Infant Mortality in Europe 1800-1950. Florence: UNICEF Institute degli Innocenti di Firenze: 3550.Google Scholar