The Escape from Hunger and Premature Death, 1700–2100
Top Cited Papers
- 17 May 2004
- book
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract
Nobel laureate Robert Fogel's compelling study, first published in 2004, examines health, nutrition and technology over the last three centuries and beyond. Throughout most of human history, chronic malnutrition has been the norm. During the past three centuries, however, a synergy between improvements in productive technology and in human physiology has enabled humans to more than double their average longevity and to increase their average body size by over 50 per cent. Larger, healthier humans have contributed to the acceleration of economic growth and technological change, resulting in reduced economic inequality, declining hours of work and a corresponding increase in leisure time. Increased longevity has also brought increased demand for health care. Professor Fogel argues that health care should be viewed as the growth industry of the twenty-first century and systems of financing it should be reformed. His book will be essential reading for all those interested in economics, demography, history and health care policy.Keywords
This publication has 147 references indexed in Scilit:
- Broken Limits to Life ExpectancyScience, 2002
- Inequality in health: socioeconomic differentials in mortality in Rome, 1990-95Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1999
- Validation of a combined comorbidity indexJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1994
- Effects of Selenium and Iodine Deficiency on Type I, Type II and Type III Iodothyronine Deiodinases and Circulating Thyroid Hormones in the RatExperimental and Clinical Endocrinology & Diabetes, 1993
- New Sources and New Techniques for the Study of Secular Trends in Nutritional Status, Health, Mortality, and the Process of AgingHistorical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History, 1993
- Differentials in demographic responses to annual price variations in pre-revolutionary FranceEuropean Journal of Population, 1987
- Age-specific mortality and short-term changes in the standard of living: Sweden, 1751–1859European Journal of Population, 1985
- Aging, Natural Death, and the Compression of MorbidityNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Social factors and height of primary schoolchildren in England and Scotland.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1978
- American Foods and Europe's Population Growth 1750-1850Journal of Social History, 1975