Testing the influenza-tuberculosis selective mortality hypothesis with Union Army data

Testing the influenza-tuberculosis selective mortality hypothesis with Union Army data

Authors:   Noymer A

Publication Year:   2009

Reference:  Social Science and Medicine, 68(9):1599-1608 (May 2009)

. Part Special Issue: Early life effects on socioeconomic performance and mortality in later life: A full life course approach using contemporary and historical sources

Abstract

Using Cox regression, this paper shows a weak association between having tuberculosis and dying from influenza among Union Army veterans in late nineteenth-century America. It has been suggested elsewhere [Noymer, A. and M. Garenne (2000). The 1918 influenza epidemic's effects on sex differentials in mortality in the United States. Population and Development Review 26(3), 565-581.] that the 1918 influenza pandemic accelerated the decline of tuberculosis, by killing many people with tuberculosis. The question remains whether individuals with tuberculosis were at greater risk of influenza death, or if the 1918/post-1918 phenomenon arose from the sheer number of deaths in the influenza pandemic. The present findings, from microdata, cautiously point toward an explanation of Noymer and Garenne's selection effect in terms of age-overlap of the 1918 pandemic mortality and tuberculosis morbidity, a phenomenon I term "passive selection". Another way to think of this is selection at the cohort, as opposed to individual, level.
KEYWORDS: Historical demography; Historical epidemiology; Influenza; Mortality; Selection; Tuberculosis; Union Army veterans; USA

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