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Journal Article

Citation

Perrott J, Sydenstricker E. Am. J. Sociol. 1935; 40(6): 804-812.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1935, University of Chicago Press)

DOI

10.1086/216985

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Results of a survey of 12,000 wage-earning families in ten localities, made early in 1933, indicated a relatively high rate of disabling illness among families hardest hit by the depression and in particular among those who were on relief in 1932. Factors contributing to this high illness rate among the new poor may have been (I) causal, reduced standards of living affecting the health of these families unfavorably. Or the factors may have been (2) selective, for example (a) sickly wage-earners, unemployed because of illness, were concentrated among the new poor, (b) a tendency to sickliness may be associated with inability to succeed during a period of increased competition for jobs, even though sickness itself is not the direct cause of unemployment. It is believed that the causal factor was more important because (I) the excess in illness rates among the unemployed was found among children as well as adults; (2) the highest illness rate was exhibited by families that suffered the greatest loss of income; and (3) when all families were excluded in which the wage-earner at any time between 1929 and 1932 was unemployed because of illness, the same excess in illness rate was observed in the group that had fallen from comfort to poverty during the depression.

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