1,812
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric

References

  • Arrow, K. J. 1963. “Uncertainty and the Welfare Economics of Medical Care.” American Economic Review 53 (5): 941–973.
  • Biewen, M, and A. Juhasz. 2017. “Direct Estimation of Equivalence Scales and More Evidence on Independence of Base.” Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 79 (5): 875–905. doi:10.1111/obes.12166.
  • Boianovsky, M, and G. Erreygers. 2021. “How Economists Ignored the Spanish Flu Pandemic in 1918-1920.” Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 14 (1): 89–109. doi:10.23941/ejpe.v14i1.549.
  • Carpenter, K. J. 1994. “The Life and Times of W.O. Atwater (1844-1907).” The Journal of Nutrition 124 (9 Suppl): 1707S–1714S. doi:10.1093/jn/124.suppl_9.1707S.
  • Chapin, R. C. 1909a. The Standard of Living among Workingmen’s Families in New York City, New York: Charities Publication Committee.
  • Chapin, R. C. 1909b. “The Influence of Income on Standards of Life.” American Journal of Sociology 14 (5): 638–647. doi:10.1086/211728.
  • Chapin, R. C. 1909c. “The Influence of Income on Standards of Life.” American Economic Association Quarterly 3rd Series, 10 (1): 180–192.
  • Chapin, C. V. 1917. “The Relative Values of Public Health Procedures.” Journal of the American Medical Association LXIX (2): 90–95. doi:10.1001/jama.1917.02590290012004.
  • Cicarelli, J, and J. Cicarelli. 2003. Distinguished Women Economists, Westport: Greenwood.
  • Clark, T., E. Sydenstricker, and S. D. Collins. 1922. “Heights and Weights of School Children: A Study of the Heights and Weights of 14,335 Native White School Children in Maryland, Virginia, and North and South Carolina.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 37 (20): 1185–1207. doi:10.2307/4576394.
  • Clarke, P, and G. Erreygers. 2023. “Edgar Sydenstricker, equivalence scales and pellagra: when economics helped establish that a disease was not infectious,” forthcoming.
  • COMMITTEE ON THE COSTS OF MEDICAL CARE 1932. Medical Care for the American People, Publications of the Committee on the Costs of Medical Care No. 28, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Dublin, L. 1915. “Infant Mortality in Fall River, Massachusetts – a Survey of the Mortality among 833 Infants Born in June, July, and August 1913.” Publications of the American Statistical Association 14 (110): 505–520. doi:10.2307/2964866.
  • Duke, E. 1915. Infant Mortality. Results of a Field Study in Johnstown, Pa., Based on Births in One Calendar Year (Children’s Bureau, Infant Mortality Series No. 3), Washington: Government Printing Office.
  • Elvehjem, C. A. 1940. “Relation of Nicotinic Acid to Pellagra.” Physiological Reviews 20 (2): 249–271. doi:10.1152/physrev.1940.20.2.249.
  • Etheridge, E. W. 1972. “The Butterfly Caste. A Social History of Pellagra in the South (Contributions in American History.” Number 17), Westport: Greenwood.
  • Falk, I. S. 1974. “Commentary.”, in: R.V. Kasius (Ed.), The Challenge of Facts. Selected Public Health Papers of Edgar Sydenstricker, New York: Milbank Memorial Fund, 95–107.
  • Friedman, M. 1952. “A Method of Comparing Incomes of Families Differing in Composition.” in Studies in Income and Wealth, Volume 15, Cambridge: NBER, 9–24.
  • Frost, W. H. 1919. “The Epidemiology of Influenza.” Journal of the American Medical Association 73 (5): 313–318. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610310007003.
  • Frost, W. H, and E. Sydenstricker. 1919a. “Influenza in Maryland: Preliminary Statistics of Certain Localities.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 34 (11): 491–504. doi:10.2307/4575056.
  • Frost, W. H, and E. Sydenstricker. 1919b. “Epidemic Influenza in Foreign Countries.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 34 (25): 1361–1376. doi:10.2307/4575202.
  • Fuchs, V. R. 1989. “Health Economics.” in J.E. Eatwell, M. Millgate and P. Newman (Eds), Social Economics (the New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics), London: Macmillan, 119–129.
  • Goldberger, J. 1914a. “The Etiology of Pellagra: The Significance of Certain Epidemiological Observations with Respect Thereto.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 29 (26): 1683–1686. doi:10.2307/4570920.
  • Goldberger, J. 1914b. “The Cause and Prevention of Pellagra.” Public Health Reports 29 (37): 2354–2357.
  • Goldberger, J. 1916. “The Transmissibility of Pellagra: Experimental Attempts at Transmission to the Human Subject.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 31 (46): 3159–3173. doi:10.2307/4574262.
  • Goldberger, J., C. H. Waring, and D. G. Willets. 1914. “The Treatment and Prevention of Pellagra.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 29 (43): 2821–2825. doi:10.2307/4571457.
  • Goldberger, J, and G. A. Wheeler. 1915. “Experimental Pellagra in the Human Subject Brought about by a Restricted Diet.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 30 (46): 3336–3339. doi:10.2307/4572984.
  • Goldberger, Joseph, C. H. Waring, and David. G. Willets. 1915. “The Prevention of Pellagra: A Test of Diet among Institutional Inmates.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 30 (43): 3117–3131. doi:10.2307/4572932.
  • Goldberger, J., G. A. Wheeler, and E. Sydenstricker. 1918. “A Study of the Diet of Nonpellagrous and of Pellagrous Households in Textile Mill Communities in South Carolina in 1916.” Journal of the American Medical Association 71 (12): 944–949.
  • Goldberger, J., G. A. Wheeler, and E. Sydenstricker. 1920a. “A Study of the Relation of Diet to Pellagra Incidence in Seven Textile-Mill Communities of South Carolina in 1916.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 35 (12): 648–713. doi:10.2307/4575517.
  • Goldberger, J., G. A. Wheeler, and E. Sydenstricker. 1920b. “Pellagra Incidence in Relation to Sex, Age, Season, Occupation, and ‘Disabling Sickness’ in Seven Cotton-Mill Villages of South Carolina during 1916.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 35 (28): 1650–1664. doi:10.2307/4575643.
  • Goldberger, J., G. A. Wheeler, and E. Sydenstricker. 1920c. “A Study of the Relation of Family Income and Other Economic Factors to Pellagra Incidence in Seven Cotton-Mill Villages of South Carolina in 1916.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 35 (46): 2673–2714. doi:10.2307/4575780.
  • Hargrove, J. L. 2006. “History of the Calorie in Nutrition.” The Journal of Nutrition 136 (12): 2957–2961. doi:10.1093/jn/136.12.2957.
  • King, W. I. 1936. “Edgar Sydenstricker.” Journal of the American Statistical Association 31 (194): 411–414. doi:10.1080/01621459.1936.10503344.
  • Kiser, C. V., D. G. Wiehl, P. C. Glick, and W. H. Grabil. 1971. “The Work of the Milbank Memorial Fund in Population since 1928.” The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 49 (4): 15–66. doi:10.2307/3349464.
  • Klarman, H. 1965. The Economics of Health, New York, Columbia University Press.
  • Lam, J.-P, and E. Piérard. 2017. “The Time-Varying Relationship between Mortality and Business Cycles in the USA.” Health Economics 26 (2): 164–183.
  • Lauck, W. J., and E. Sydenstricker. 1917. Conditions of Labor in American Industries, New York and London: Funk & Wagnalls.
  • Lechner, M. 2010. “The Estimation of Causal Effects by Difference-in-Difference Methods.” Foundations and Trends® in Econometrics 4 (3): 165–224. doi:10.1561/0800000014.
  • Meyer, B. D. 1995. “Natural and Quasi-Experiments in Economics.” Journal of Business & Economic Statistics 13 (2): 151–161.
  • Mooney, S. J., J. Knox, and A. Morabia. 2014. “The Thompson-McFadden Commission and Joseph Goldberger: Contrasting 2 Historical Investigations of Pellagra in Cotton Mill Villages in South Carolina.” American Journal of Epidemiology 180 (3): 235–244. doi:10.1093/aje/kwu134.
  • Mushkin, S. J. 1958. “Toward a Definition of Health Economics.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 73 (9): 785–793. doi:10.2307/4590242.
  • Myrdal, G. 1952. “Economic Aspects of Health.” in Fifth World Health Assembly, 5-22 May 1952, Technical Discussions1–28. Geneva: World Health Organization.
  • Ogburn, W. F. 1931. “A Device for Measuring the Size of Families.” invented by Edward Sydenstricker and W.I. King,” in: S.A. Rice (Ed.), Methods in Social Science: A Case Book, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 210–219.
  • Pearl, R. 1919. “Influenza Studies: I. On Certain General Statistical Aspects of the 1918 Epidemic in American Cities.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 34 (32): 1743–1783. doi:10.2307/4575264.
  • Pearl, R. 1921. “Influenza Studies.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 36 (7): 273–298. doi:10.2307/4575894.
  • Perrott, G. S. J, and S. D. Collins. 1935. “Relation of Sickness to Income and Income Change in 10 Surveyed Communities. Health and Depression Studies No. 1: Method of Study and General Results for Each Locality.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 50 (18): 595–622. doi:10.2307/4581530.
  • Perrott, G. S. J, and E. Sydenstricker. 1935. “Causal and Selective Factors in Sickness.” American Journal of Sociology 40 (6): 804–812. doi:10.1086/216985.
  • Robertson, J. 1913. “Infant Mortality in Relation to Factory Labor.”, in: Transactions of the Fifteenth International Congress on Hygiene and Demography, Washington, September 23-28, 1912, Washington: Government Printing Office, Vol. III, 947–956.
  • Roe, D. A. 1973. A Plague of Corn: The Social History of Pellagra, Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • Rowntree, B. S. 1902. Poverty. A Study of Town Life. 2nd ed. London: Macmillan.
  • Savedoff, W. D. 2004. “Kenneth Arrow and the Birth of Health Economics.” Bulletin of the World Health Organization 82 (2): 139–140.
  • Schaller, J, and M. Zerpa. 2019. “Short-Run Effects of Parental Job Loss on Child Health.” American Journal of Health Economics 5 (1): 8–41. doi:10.1162/ajhe_a_00106.
  • Schereschewsky, J. W. 1915. Studies in Vocational Diseases. I. The Health of Garment Workers (Public Health Bulletin No. 71), Washington, Government Printing Office, 17–103.
  • Schereschewsky, J. W., B. S. Warren, and Edgar Sydenstricker. 1916. “Health of Garment Workers. The Relation of Economic Status to Health. Introduction.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 31 (21): 1298. doi:10.2307/4573639.
  • Schereschewsky, J. W, and D. H. Tuck. 1915. Studies in Vocational Diseases. II. The Hygienic Conditions of Illumination in Workshops of the Women’s Garment Industry (Public Health Bulletin No. 71), Washington, Government Printing Office, 105–223.
  • Siler, J. F., P. E. Garrison, and W. J. Macneal. 1914. “A Statistical Study of the Relation of Pellagra to Use of Certain Foods and to Location of Domicile in Six Selected Industrial Communities.” Archives of Internal Medicine 14 (3): 293–373.
  • Siler, J. F., P. E. Garrison, and W. J. Macneal. 1917a. “Relation of Pellagra to Location of Domicile in Spartan Mills, S. C., and the Adjacent District.” Archives of Internal Medicine 20 (2): 198–315.
  • Siler, J. F., P. E. Garrison, and W. J. Macneal. 1917b. “The Relation of Pellagra to Location of Domicile in Inman Mills, Inman, S. C.” Archives of Internal Medicine 20 (4): 521–574.
  • Susser, M, and Z. Stein. 2009. Eras in Epidemiology: The Evolution of Ideas, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Swain, D. C. 1962. “The Rise of a Research Empire: NIH, 1930 to 1950.” Science (New York, N.Y.) 138 (3546): 1233–1235. doi:10.1126/science.138.3546.1233.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1915. A Brief History of Taxation in Virginia, Richmond: The Legislative Reference Bureau of Virginia.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1916. “The Settlement of Disputes under Agreements in the Anthracite Industry.” Journal of Political Economy 24 (3): 254–283. doi:10.1086/252801.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1918. “Preliminary Statistics of the Influenza Epidemic.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 33 (52): 2305–2321. doi:10.2307/4574973.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1921. “Variations in Case Fatality during the Influenza Epidemic of 1918.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 36 (36): 2201–2210. doi:10.2307/4576118.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1926. “A Study of Illness in a General Population Group: Hagerstown Morbidity Studies No. I: The Method of Study and General Results.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 41 (39): 2069–2088. doi:10.2307/4578020.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1927. “The Measurement of Results of Public Health Work. An Introductory Discussion.” in Milbank Memorial Fund Report for the Year Ended December 31, 1926, New York: Milbank Memorial Fund, 27–60.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1928a. “The Statistical Evaluation of the Results of Social Experiments in Public Health.” Journal of the American Statistical Association 23 (161): 155–165. doi:10.2307/2277580.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1928b. “The Statistician’s Place in Public Health Work.” Journal of the American Statistical Association 23 (162): 115–120. doi:10.1080/01621459.1928.10503004.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1928c. “The Decline in the Tuberculosis Date Rate in Cattaraugus County.” The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly Bulletin 6 (2): 41–50. doi:10.2307/3347534.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1929a. “Economic Status and the Incidence of Illness: Hagerstown Morbidity Studies No. X: Gross and Specific Illness Rates by Age and Cause among Persons Classified according to Family Economic Status.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 44 (30): 1821–1833. doi:10.2307/4579329.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1929b. “Differential Fertility according to Economic Status: Hagerstown Morbidity Studies No. XI: Live Birth and Still Birth Rates among Married Women of Different Ages Classified according to Family Economic Condition.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 44 (35): 2101–2106. doi:10.2307/4579371.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1931. “The Incidence of Influenza among Persons of Different Economic Status during the Epidemic of 1918.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 46 (4): 154–170. doi:10.2307/4579923.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1933a. Health and Environment, New York and London: McGraw-Hill.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1933b. “Health and the Depression.” The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly Bulletin 11 (4): 273–280. doi:10.2307/3347444.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1934. “Group Medicine or Health Insurance. Which Comes First?” American Labor Legislation Review 24 (2): 79–86.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1935. “Health Insurance and the Public Health.” Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science 16 (3): 12–21. doi:10.2307/1172795.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1936a. “Health under the Social Security Act.” Social Service Review 10 (1): 12–22. doi:10.1086/631785.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1936b. “Economy in Public Health.” The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 14 (1): 3–12. doi:10.2307/3347820.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1936c. “Public Health Provisions of the Social Security Act.” Law and Contemporary Problems 3 (2): 263–270. doi:10.2307/1189395.
  • Sydenstricker, E. 1974. “The Challenge of Facts.” Selected Public Health Papers of Edgar Sydenstricker, ed. by Richard V. Kasius, New York: Milbank Memorial Fund.
  • Sydenstricker, E, and A. L. Burger. 1914. School History of Virginia, Lynchburg: Dulaney-Boatwright Company.
  • Sydenstricker, E, and M. L. King. 1920a. “Difficulties in Computing Civil Death Rates for 1918, with Especial Reference to Epidemic Influenza.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 35 (7): 330–345. doi:10.2307/4575481.
  • Sydenstricker, E, and W. I. King. 1920b. “A Method of Classifying Families according to Incomes in Studies of Disease Prevalence.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) 35 (48): 2829–2846. doi:10.2307/4575798.
  • Sydenstricker, E, and W. I. King. 1921a. “The Classification of the Population according to Income.” Journal of Political Economy 29 (7): 571–594. doi:10.1086/253372.
  • Sydenstricker, E, and W. I. King. 1921b. “The Measurement of the Relative Economic Status of Families.” Quarterly Publications of the American Statistical Association 17 (135): 842–857. doi:10.2307/2965186.
  • Sydenstricker, E., W. I. King, and D. Wiehl. 1924. “The Income Cycle in the Life of the Wage-Earner.” Public Health Reports 39 (34): 2133–2140.
  • Tapia Granados, J. A, and A. V. Diez Roux. 2010. “Life and Death during the Great Depression.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(41): 17290–17295.
  • Vaughan, W. T. 1921. Influenza: An Epidemiologic Study, Baltimore, MD: The American Journal of Hygiene.
  • Warren, B. S, and E. Sydenstricker. 1916a. Health Insurance. Its Relation to the Public Health (Public Health Bulletin, No. 76), Washington: Government Publishing Office.
  • Warren, B. S, and E. Sydenstricker. 1916b. “Health of Garment Workers in Relation to Their Economic Status.” Public Health Reports 31 (21): 1298–1305.
  • Weisz, G. 2011. “Epidemiology and Health Care Reform: The National Health Survey of 1935-1936.” American Journal of Public Health 101 (3): 438–447. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2010.196519.
  • Wiehl, D. G. 1974. “Edgar Sydenstricker: A Memoir.” in R.V. Kasius (Ed.), The Challenge of Facts. Selected Public Health Papers of Edgar Sydenstricker, New York: Milbank Memorial Fund, 1–17.
  • Winslow, C.-E. A. 1951. The Cost of Sickness and the Price of Health, (World Health Organization Monograph Series No. 7, Geneva: World Health Organization.
  • Wolfe, B. 2018. “Health Economics.” in The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 5696–5706. London: Macmillan.