4.3 Article

Unequal excess mortality during the Spanish Flu pandemic in the Netherlands

Journal

ECONOMICS & HUMAN BIOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ehb.2022.101179

Keywords

Excess mortality 1918-9 influenza pandemic Spanish flu Socioeconomic health inequality Occupational health risk

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  2. Swedish Foundation for the Humanities and Social Sciences (Riksbankens Jubileumsfond, RJ)
  3. [184.034.023]

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This paper explores the relationship between occupational characteristics and excess mortality among men during the Spanish Flu pandemic in the Netherlands. The study finds that men with occupations featuring high levels of social contact had higher mortality rates during this period, and there was a socioeconomic gradient to excess mortality among men even after accounting for workplace exposure.
A century after the Spanish Flu, the COVID-19 pandemic has brought renewed attention to socioeconomic and occupational differences in mortality in the earlier pandemic. The magnitude of these differences and the pathways between occupation and increased mortality remain unclear, however. In this paper, we explore the relation between occupational characteristics and excess mortality among men during the Spanish Flu pandemic in the Netherlands. By creating a new occupational coding for exposure to disease at work, we separate social status and occupational conditions for viral transmission. We use a new data set based on men's death certificates to calculate excess mortality rates by region, age group, and occupational group. Using OLS regression models, we estimate whether social position, regular interaction in the workplace, and working in an enclosed space affected excess mortality among men in the Netherlands in the autumn of 1918. We find some evidence that men with occupations that featured high levels of social contact had higher mortality in this period. Above all, however, we find a strong socioeconomic gradient to excess mortality among men during the Spanish Flu pandemic, even after accounting for exposure in the workplace.

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