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The Role of Public Health Improvements in Health Advances: The Twentieth-Century United States

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TLDR
This paper found that clean water was responsible for nearly half the total mortality reduction in major cities, three quarters of the infant mortality reduction, and nearly two thirds of the child mortality reduction.
Abstract
Mortality rates in the United States fell more rapidly during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries than in any other period in American history. This decline coincided with an epidemiological transition and the disappearance of a mortality “penalty” associated with living in urban areas. There is little empirical evidence and much unresolved debate about what caused these improvements, however. In this article, we report the causal influence of clean water technologies— filtration and chlorination—on mortality in major cities during the early twentieth century. Plausibly exogenous variation in the timing and location of technology adoption was used to identify these effects, and the validity of this identifying assumption is examined in detail. We found that clean water was responsible for nearly half the total mortality reduction in major cities, three quarters of the infant mortality reduction, and nearly two thirds of the child mortality reduction. Rough calculations suggest that the social rate of return to these technologies was greater than 23 to 1, with a cost per person-year saved by clean water of about $500 in 2003 dollars. Implications for developing countries are briefly considered.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Framework for Public Health Action: The Health Impact Pyramid

TL;DR: A 5-tier pyramid best describes the impact of different types of public health interventions and provides a framework to improve health and implements interventions at each of the levels to achieve the maximum possible sustained public health benefit.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Determinants of Mortality

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the application of scientific advance and technical progress (some of which is induced by income and facilitated by education) as the ultimate determinant of health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevention of chronic disease in the 21st century: elimination of the leading preventable causes of premature death and disability in the USA

TL;DR: To effectively and equitably address the chronic disease burden, public health and health-care systems need to deploy integrated approaches that bundle strategies and interventions, address many risk factors and conditions simultaneously, create population-wide changes, help the population subgroups most affected, and rely on implementation by many sectors, including public-private partnerships and involvement from all stakeholders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disease and Development: The Effect of Life Expectancy on Economic Growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors exploit the major international health improvements from the 1940s to estimate the effect of life expectancy on economic performance and find that a 1 percent increase in life expectancy leads to a 1.7 −2 percent increase of population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Waterborne transmission of protozoan parasites: Review of worldwide outbreaks - An update 2011-2016.

TL;DR: This review provides a comprehensive update of worldwide waterborne parasitic protozoan outbreaks that occurred with reports published since previous reviews largely between January 2011 and December 2016, and finds developing countries that are probably most affected by such waterborne disease outbreaks still lack reliable surveillance systems.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The value of a statistical life: A critical review of market estimates throughout the world

TL;DR: More recently, this article reviewed more than 60 studies of mortality risk premiums from ten countries and approximately 40 studies that present estimates of injury risk premiums, and concluded that an income elasticity of the value of a statistical life from about 0.5 to 0.6 was found.
ReportDOI

The Relationship Between Education and Adult Mortality in the United States

TL;DR: This article examined whether education has a causal impact on health and found that it has a large and positive correlation between education and health, and that this effect is perhaps larger than has been previously estimated in the literature.
ReportDOI

Economic growth, population theory, and physiology: the bearing of long-term processes on the making of economic policy

TL;DR: The need to take account of history, as Simon Kuznets (1941) stressed, has often led to a misunderstanding of current economic problems by investigators who have not realized that their generalizations rested upon transient circumstances.
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