RT @ewrigleyfield: 2. In prior work, some of us showed that urban white mortality during the twentieth century's deadliest pandemic, the 19…
2. In prior work, some of us showed that urban white mortality during the twentieth century's deadliest pandemic, the 1918 flu, was still not as bad as urban Black mortality was *every single year* Here, we learned that analogy is deeper than we knew htt
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
Small disparities in 1918 are surprising bc in every other year, they were REALLY HIGH. In fact, in this other paper, some of us found racism was so extreme that DURING 1918 white infectious death rates were still better than Black rates every year 5/ h
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: @LudovicSpeaks @foxjust Yes, I learned it in my own research and it astonished me. I didn't believe it at first. Links:…
RT @ewrigleyfield: @LudovicSpeaks @foxjust Yes, I learned it in my own research and it astonished me. I didn't believe it at first. Links:…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: @LudovicSpeaks @foxjust Yes, I learned it in my own research and it astonished me. I didn't believe it at first. Links:…
RT @ewrigleyfield: @LudovicSpeaks @foxjust Yes, I learned it in my own research and it astonished me. I didn't believe it at first. Links:…
RT @ewrigleyfield: @LudovicSpeaks @foxjust Yes, I learned it in my own research and it astonished me. I didn't believe it at first. Links:…
RT @ewrigleyfield: @LudovicSpeaks @foxjust Yes, I learned it in my own research and it astonished me. I didn't believe it at first. Links:…
Just a little racism
RT @ewrigleyfield: @LudovicSpeaks @foxjust Yes, I learned it in my own research and it astonished me. I didn't believe it at first. Links:…
@LudovicSpeaks @foxjust Yes, I learned it in my own research and it astonished me. I didn't believe it at first. Links: https://t.co/sgqMs9J8nN https://t.co/qswnvnscV0
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
From 1906-1920, African Americans in cities experienced death rates from infectious disease greater than what urban whites experienced during the 1918 flu pandemic. @minnpop https://t.co/eY2k7YE2Pg
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
Systemic racism is and has long been a public health issue. "From 1906 to 1920, African Americans in cities experienced a rate of death from infectious disease that was greater than what urban whites experienced during the 1918 flu pandemic." https://t.
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same wa…
This pattern is not historically new. My earlier research with @jamesfeigenbaum and Chris Muller showed that the same was true of the 1918 pandemic: white mortality in 1918 was less than what Blacks experienced in every prior year. 3/8 https://t.co/BTsX
RT @ewrigleyfield: What we found still stuns me: urban whites' infectious mortality in 1918 was less than what urban Blacks experienced *ev…
RT @ewrigleyfield: What we found still stuns me: urban whites' infectious mortality in 1918 was less than what urban Blacks experienced *ev…
RT @ewrigleyfield: What we found still stuns me: urban whites' infectious mortality in 1918 was less than what urban Blacks experienced *ev…
RT @e_hernandez8: Indeed stunning and important work by @ewrigleyfield. Check out the whole thread and if you aren’t already, recommend fol…
RT @e_hernandez8: Indeed stunning and important work by @ewrigleyfield. Check out the whole thread and if you aren’t already, recommend fol…
RT @e_hernandez8: Indeed stunning and important work by @ewrigleyfield. Check out the whole thread and if you aren’t already, recommend fol…
RT @e_hernandez8: Indeed stunning and important work by @ewrigleyfield. Check out the whole thread and if you aren’t already, recommend fol…
RT @e_hernandez8: Indeed stunning and important work by @ewrigleyfield. Check out the whole thread and if you aren’t already, recommend fol…
Indeed stunning and important work by @ewrigleyfield. Check out the whole thread and if you aren’t already, recommend following her.
RT @ewrigleyfield: What we found still stuns me: urban whites' infectious mortality in 1918 was less than what urban Blacks experienced *ev…
RT @ewrigleyfield: What we found still stuns me: urban whites' infectious mortality in 1918 was less than what urban Blacks experienced *ev…
RT @ewrigleyfield: What we found still stuns me: urban whites' infectious mortality in 1918 was less than what urban Blacks experienced *ev…
RT @ewrigleyfield: What we found still stuns me: urban whites' infectious mortality in 1918 was less than what urban Blacks experienced *ev…
What we found still stuns me: urban whites' infectious mortality in 1918 was less than what urban Blacks experienced *every year* before that pandemic. 2.5/5 https://t.co/BTsX6WN3xX
Cities got less deadly over this period (as @ewrigleyfield and Muller and I show), but there's still plenty of debate as to why https://t.co/yCGIP31ULu https://t.co/LHw1FtrKtj
RT @alizaluft: Yes yes yes! This is such excellent, relevant, & important work on the long history of health disparities in the US by @ewri…
RT @alizaluft: Yes yes yes! This is such excellent, relevant, & important work on the long history of health disparities in the US by @ewri…
RT @ewrigleyfield: This is my own finding and it still shocks me. https://t.co/IRplauhuXj
RT @ewrigleyfield: This is my own finding and it still shocks me. https://t.co/IRplauhuXj
RT @ewrigleyfield: This is my own finding and it still shocks me. https://t.co/IRplauhuXj
RT @ewrigleyfield: This is my own finding and it still shocks me.
RT @ewrigleyfield: This is my own finding and it still shocks me.
RT @ewrigleyfield: This is my own finding and it still shocks me. https://t.co/IRplauhuXj
This is my own finding and it still shocks me.
Other findings from #SpanishFlu From 1906-1920, African Americans in cities experienced death rates from infectious disease greater than what urban whites experienced during the 1918 flu #pandemic. @minnpop @NICHD_NIH @PopAssocAmerica @ewrigleyfield https
@BrianBBeach @leah_boustan @C__Kronenberg @agoodmanbacon @K_A_Eriksson We have interpolated population denominators for a lot of cities from this paper https://t.co/AH8aSz2HPD based on the @ipums complete counts I can share
@UMNSociology Assistant Professor Elizabeth Wrigley-Field (@ewrigleyfield) shares new insights on the decline of U.S. urban infectious mortality in her paper, “Regional and Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in U.S. Cities, 1900–1948.” https
RT @RebeccaSear: Regional & Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in US Cities 1900–48: "From 1906-20, African Americans in cit…
RT @RebeccaSear: Regional & Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in US Cities 1900–48: "From 1906-20, African Americans in cit…
RT @RebeccaSear: Regional & Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in US Cities 1900–48: "From 1906-20, African Americans in cit…
You might want to read this article too https://t.co/wobWkhGV3f
RT @RebeccaSear: Regional & Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in US Cities 1900–48: "From 1906-20, African Americans in cit…
Regional & Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in US Cities 1900–48: "From 1906-20, African Americans in cities experienced rate of death from infectious disease that was greater than what urban whites experienced during 1918 flu pandemic
RT @PopAssocAmerica: Regional and Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in U.S. Cities, 1900–1948: https://t.co/GXnJPXiiDB @jam…
Regional and Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in U.S. Cities, 1900–1948: https://t.co/GXnJPXiiDB @jamesfeigenbaum @ewrigleyfield PAA Members access #demography online!
RT @InequalityHKS: Article in Demography, by @jamesfeigenbaum, Christopher Muller, @ewrigleyfield here (2/2) https://t.co/KXtUuPAsYU http…
Good Lord. From 1906-1920, African-Americans in cities experienced a rate of death from infectious disease *greater* than what urban white experienced during the 1918 flu pandemic. In other words, black people living in cities spent 15 years living in
Article in Demography, by @jamesfeigenbaum, Christopher Muller, @ewrigleyfield here (2/2) https://t.co/KXtUuPAsYU https://t.co/FhqM8cgMtU