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1.
Demography ; 61(2): 337-361, 2024 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38393987

ABSTRACT

I document the transmission of a grandfather's net nutritional deprivation and psychosocial stress in young adulthood across multiple generations using the grandfather's ex-prisoner of war (ex-POW) status in the U.S. Civil War (1861-1865). Using a newly created dataset, I uncover an association between a grandfather's ex-POW status and the longevity after age 45 of his sons and male-line grandsons but not of his daughters, granddaughters, female-line grandsons, children-in-law, or grandchildren-in-law. Male-line grandsons lost roughly a year of life at age 45 (4% of remaining life expectancy) if descended from ex-POWs who suffered severe captivity conditions than if descended from non-POWs. If their grandfathers faced a less harsh captivity, male-line grandsons lost less than a year of life compared with those descended from non-POWs. I find that the grandfather's age at exposure and the grandson's education, as well as the son's and the grandson's poor late gestational conditions (proxied by season of birth), mediate this relationship. I rule out socioeconomic status, marriage and mortality selection, and cultural or psychological transmission from grandfathers to grandsons as explanations. I cannot rule out an epigenetic explanation.


Subject(s)
Grandparents , Prisoners , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic , Child , Humans , Male , Female , Pregnancy , Young Adult , Adult , Middle Aged , Longevity , Family/psychology , Marriage/psychology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychology
2.
J Health Econ ; 91: 102796, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37541079

ABSTRACT

Much of the increase in the prevalence of overweight and obesity has been in developing countries with a history of famines and malnutrition. This paper is the first to examine overweight among adult grandsons of grandfathers exposed to starvation during developmental ages. I study grandsons born to grandfathers who served in the Union Army during the US Civil War (1861-5) where some grandfathers experienced severe net malnutrition because they suffered a harsh POW experience. I find that male-line but not female-line grandsons of grandfathers who survived a severe captivity during their growing years faced a 21% increase in mean overweight and a 2% increase in mean BMI compared to grandsons of non-POWs. Male-line grandsons descended from grandfathers who experienced a harsh captivity faced a 22%-28% greater risk of dying every year after age 45 relative to grandsons descended from non-POWs, with overweight accounting for 9%-14% of the excess risk.


Subject(s)
Grandparents , Malnutrition , Adult , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Overweight/epidemiology , Family , Malnutrition/epidemiology
3.
Hist Methods ; 56(4): 223-239, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38742179

ABSTRACT

This paper introduces four new intergenerational and multigenerational datasets which follow both sons and daughters and which can be used to study the persistence of longevity, socioeconomic status, family structure, and geographic mobility across generations. The data follow the children of Black and White Union Army (US Civil War, 1861-5) veterans from birth to death, linking them to the available censuses. The White samples include an over-sample of children of ex-POWs. A separate collection links grandchildren of White Union Army veterans to their death records. The data were created with high quality manual linkage procedures utilizing a wide variety of records to establish links.

4.
J Health Econ ; 70: 102281, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31918029

ABSTRACT

We investigate when and how health shocks reverberate across the life cycle and down to descendants in a manual labor economy by examining the association of war wounds with the socioeconomic status and older age mortality of US Civil War (1861-5) veterans and of their adult children. Younger veterans who had been severely wounded in the war left the farm sector, becoming laborers. Consistent with human capital and job matching models, older severely wounded men were unlikely to switch sectors and their wealth declined by 37-46%. War wounds were correlated with children's socioeconomic and mortality outcomes in ways dependent on sex and paternal age group.


Subject(s)
Health Status , Military Personnel/psychology , Social Class , Warfare/psychology , Adult , American Civil War , Child of Impaired Parents , Databases, Factual , Employment/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Male , United States/epidemiology , Veterans , Wounds and Injuries/epidemiology
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(44): 11215-11220, 2018 10 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30322945

ABSTRACT

We study whether paternal trauma is transmitted to the children of survivors of Confederate prisoner of war (POW) camps during the US Civil War (1861-1865) to affect their longevity at older ages, the mechanisms behind this transmission, and the reversibility of this transmission. We examine children born after the war who survived to age 45, comparing children whose fathers were non-POW veterans and ex-POWs imprisoned in very different camp conditions. We also compare children born before and after the war within the same family by paternal ex-POW status. The sons of ex-POWs imprisoned when camp conditions were at their worst were 1.11 times more likely to die than the sons of non-POWs and 1.09 times more likely to die than the sons of ex-POWs when camp conditions were better. Paternal ex-POW status had no impact on daughters. Among sons born in the fourth quarter, when maternal in utero nutrition was adequate, there was no impact of paternal ex-POW status. In contrast, among sons born in the second quarter, when maternal nutrition was inadequate, the sons of ex-POWs who experienced severe hardship were 1.2 times more likely to die than the sons of non-POWs and ex-POWs who fared better in captivity. Socioeconomic effects, family structure, father-specific survival traits, and maternal effects, including quality of paternal marriages, cannot explain our findings. While we cannot rule out fully psychological or cultural effects, our findings are most consistent with an epigenetic explanation.


Subject(s)
Prisoners of War/psychology , Prisoners/psychology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/etiology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychology , Veterans/psychology , Child , Epigenomics/methods , Fathers/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Marriage/psychology , Middle Aged , Mothers/psychology , Nuclear Family/psychology , Parent-Child Relations , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/genetics , Survivors/psychology
6.
Data Brief ; 17: 226-233, 2018 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29876390

ABSTRACT

We describe the publicly available data created by the NIA funded Early Indicators program project, often referred to as the Union Army data, and the subset of these data used in "Persistent Social Networks: Civil War Veterans Who Fought Together Co-Locate in Later Life" (Costa et al., Forthcoming) [1]. This data subset can be used for reproducibility and extensions and also illustrates how the original complex data derived from archival administrative records can be used.

7.
Reg Sci Urban Econ ; 70: 289-299, 2018 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29887654

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate the long reach of early social ties in the location decision of individuals and in their older age mortality risk using data on Union Army veterans of the US Civil War (1861-5). We estimate discrete choice migration models to quantify the trade-offs across locations faced by veterans. Veterans were more likely to move to a neighborhood or county where men from their same war company lived and were more likely to move to such areas than to areas where other veterans were located. Veterans also were less likely to move far from their origin and avoided urban immigrant areas and high mortality risk areas. They also avoided areas that opposed the Civil War. This co-location evidence highlights the existence of persistent social networks. Such social networks had long-term consequences: veterans living close to war-time comrades had a 6% lower probability of dying.

8.
Economica ; 84(335): 393-416, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28695217

ABSTRACT

In the late 19th Century, cities in Western Europe and the United States suffered from high levels of infectious disease. Over a 40 year period, there was a dramatic decline in infectious disease deaths in cities. As such objective progress in urban quality of life took place, how did the media report this trend? At that time newspapers were the major source of information educating urban households about the risks they faced. By constructing a unique panel data base, we find that news reports were positively associated with government announced typhoid mortality counts and the size of this effect actually grew after the local governments made large investments in public water works to reduce typhoid rates. News coverage was more responsive to unexpected increases in death rates than to unexpected decreases in death rates.

9.
Hist Methods ; 50(2): 79-95, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28690347

ABSTRACT

This paper overviews the research opportunities made possible by a NIA-funded program project, Early Indicators, Intergenerational Processes, and Aging. Data collection began almost three decades ago on 40,000 soldiers from the Union Army in the US Civil War. The sample contains extensive demographic, economic, and medical data from childhood to death. In recent years, a large sample of African-American soldiers and an oversampling of soldiers from major US cities have been added. Hundreds of historical maps containing public health data have been geocoded to place soldiers and their family members in a geospatial context. With newly granted funding, thousands of veterans will be linked to the demographic information available from the census and vital records of their children.

10.
Am Econ Rev ; 105(5): 564-9, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29543414

ABSTRACT

In the United States in the late 19th and early 20th century, large cities had extremely high death rates from infectious disease. Within major cities such as New York City and Philadelphia, there was significant variation at any point in time in the mortality rate across neighborhoods. Between 1900 and 1930 neighborhood mortality convergence took place in New York City and Philadelphia. We document these trends and discuss their consequences for neighborhood quality of life dynamics and the economic incidence of who gains from effective public health interventions.


Subject(s)
Communicable Diseases/mortality , Health Status Disparities , Health Transition , Mortality/trends , Urban Health/statistics & numerical data , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , Black or African American , Communicable Diseases/history , Diarrhea/mortality , Diphtheria/mortality , Geography , History, 20th Century , Humans , Measles/mortality , Mortality/history , New York City , Philadelphia , Pneumonia/mortality , Scarlet Fever/mortality , Tuberculosis/mortality , Typhoid Fever/mortality , United States , Water Pollution/prevention & control
11.
J Law Econ Organ ; 30(3): 437-462, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25221788

ABSTRACT

US Civil War data allow examinations of theories of leadership. By observing both leaders and followers during the war and 40 years after it, I establish that the most able became wartime leaders, that leading by example from the front was an effective strategy in reducing desertion rates, and that leaders later migrated to the larger cities because this is where their superior skills would have had the highest payoffs. I find mixed evidence on whether leaders were created or born. I find that US cities were magnets for the most able and provided training opportunities for both leaders and followers: Men might start in a low social status occupation in a city but then move to a higher status occupation. (JEL M50, N31).

12.
Demography ; 49(4): 1185-206, 2012 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22968939

ABSTRACT

Debilitating events could leave either more frail or more robust survivors, depending on the extent of scarring and mortality selection. The majority of empirical analyses find more frail survivors. I find heterogeneous effects. Among severely stressed former Union Army prisoners of war (POWs), the effect that dominates 35 years after the end of the Civil War depends on age at imprisonment. Among survivors to 1900, those younger than 30 at imprisonment faced higher old-age mortality and morbidity and worse socioeconomic outcomes than non-POW and other POW controls, whereas those older than 30 at imprisonment faced a lower older-age death risk than the controls.


Subject(s)
American Civil War , Cicatrix/history , Mortality/history , Prisoners/history , Prisoners/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology , Cause of Death , Cicatrix/epidemiology , History, 19th Century , Humans , Middle Aged , Socioeconomic Factors
13.
J Econ Hist ; 70(3): 567-592, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21179379

ABSTRACT

I examine the effects of an unearned income transfer on the retirement rates and living arrangements of black Union Army veterans. I find that blacks were more than twice as responsive as whites to income transfers in their retirement decisions and 6 to 8 times as responsive in their choice of independent living arrangements. My findings have implications for understanding racial differences in rates of retirement and independent living at the beginning of the twentieth century, the rise in retirement prior to 1930, and the subsequent convergence in black-white retirement rates and living arrangements.

14.
Demography ; 47(1): 45-66, 2010 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20355683

ABSTRACT

We find that Union Army veterans of the American Civil War who faced greater wartime stress (as measured by higher battlefield mortality rates) experienced higher mortality rates at older ages, but that men who were from more cohesive companies were statistically significantly less likely to be affected by wartime stress. Our results hold for overall mortality, mortality from ischemic heart disease and stroke, and new diagnoses of arteriosclerosis. Our findings represent one of the first long-run health follow-ups of the interaction between stress and social networks in a human population in which both stress and social networks are arguably exogenous.


Subject(s)
American Civil War , Combat Disorders/history , Longevity , Military Personnel/history , Social Support , Stress, Psychological/history , Adolescent , Adult , Cardiovascular Diseases/history , Cardiovascular Diseases/mortality , Case-Control Studies , Combat Disorders/epidemiology , History, 19th Century , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged , Military Personnel/psychology , Morale , Mortality , Regression Analysis , Risk , Stress, Psychological/epidemiology , United States/epidemiology , Veterans/statistics & numerical data , Wounds and Injuries/mortality
15.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 104(33): 13219-24, 2007 Aug 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17686992

ABSTRACT

We document racial trends in chronic conditions among older men between 1910 and 2004. The 1910 black arteriosclerosis rate was six times higher than the white 2004 rate and more than two times higher than the 2004 black rate. We argue that blacks' greater lifelong burden of infection led to high arteriosclerosis rates in 1910. Infectious disease, especially respiratory infections at older ages and rheumatic fever and syphilis at younger ages, predicted arteriosclerosis in 1910, suggesting that arteriosclerosis has an infectious cause. Additional risk factors for arteriosclerosis were being born in the second relative to the fourth quarter, consistent with studies implying that atherogenesis begins in utero, and a low body mass index, consistent with an infectious disease origin of arteriosclerosis.


Subject(s)
Arteriosclerosis/epidemiology , Black People , Infections/epidemiology , White People , Aged , Arteriosclerosis/ethnology , Chronic Disease , Humans , Infections/ethnology , Middle Aged , Prevalence , Veterans
16.
Demography ; 39(1): 119-37, 2002 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11852833

ABSTRACT

Functional limitation (difficulty walking, difficulty bending, paralysis, blindness in at least one eye, or deafness in at least one ear) in the United States fell at an average annual rate of 0.6% among men aged 50 to 74 from the early twentieth century to the early 1990s. Twenty-four percent of this decline is attributable to reductions in the debilitating effects of chronic conditions, 37% is attributable to reduced rates of chronic diseases, and the remainder is unexplained. The findings have implications for theories of the impact of declining mortality rates on the health of elderly people.


Subject(s)
Chronic Disease/epidemiology , Disabled Persons/statistics & numerical data , Activities of Daily Living , Aged , Demography , Frail Elderly/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Movement , United States/epidemiology
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