Height, Frailty, and the Standard of Living: Modelling the Effects of Diet and Disease on Declining Mortality and Increasing Height
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Explanations of historical trends in both mortality and human height differ over the relative contributions of better nutrition and reduced exposure to disease. This paper explores theoretical models in which interactions between diet and disease determine both mortality and height. One model assumes that adult height is directly related to frailty, the relative risk of dying. The second model links frailty to differences between attained and potential height. Diet plays a small role in the transition to low mortality in the first model. The second model assigns a large role to diet in historical mortality trends, but implies that mortality will be unrelated to height in the future.
Re-examining the social gradient in health: A study of Dutch men, 1850-1984.
Thompson K, van Ophem J SSM Popul Health. 2023; 24:101518.
PMID: 37822806 PMC: 10562747. DOI: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2023.101518.
Casting shadows: later-life outcomes of stature.
Kok J, Quanjer B, Thompson K Hist Fam. 2023; 28(2):181-197.
PMID: 37288160 PMC: 10243405. DOI: 10.1080/1081602X.2023.2206699.
Wilson S Econ Hum Biol. 2019; 34:274-285.
PMID: 31231014 PMC: 7207258. DOI: 10.1016/j.ehb.2019.05.004.
Camara A, Roman J Popul Space Place. 2015; 21(8):704-719.
PMID: 26640422 PMC: 4666548. DOI: 10.1002/psp.1850.
Effects of Inheritance and Environment on the Heights of Brothers in Nineteenth-Century Belgium.
Alter G, Oris M Hum Nat. 2015; 19(1):44-55.
PMID: 26181377 DOI: 10.1007/s12110-008-9029-1.