Americas, Central America, Chile, Costa Rica, Demography, Developing Countries, Disease, Guatemala, Latin America, North America, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, South America, Age Factors, Economics, Morbidity, Mortality
Abstract
"The paper examines the relationship between medium and short-term changes in aggregate economic activity, and national morbidity and mortality rates by certain causes. Although overall mortality conditions have continued to improve during the economic crisis of the nineteen-eighties in the three countries studied, mortality by some causes...[has] discontinued [its] decline and [has] even increased [its] rates in some recent years.... The short-term changes in mortality in Costa Rica and Chile are generally lower than in Guatemala, but tend to be more systematic in their inverse relationship with economic fluctuations in the former. Many of the causes studied affect young and older adults, which are groups that have so far received little attention in evaluations of the health effects of economic crises in the region." (SUMMARY IN ENG), (excerpt)
Published
1991
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