Discussion paper

DP14851 Temperature, Disease, and Death in London: Analyzing Weekly Data for the Century from 1866-1965

Using weekly mortality data for London spanning 1866-1965, we analyze the changing relationship between temperature and mortality as the city developed. Our results show that both warm and cold weeks were associated with elevated mortality in the late 19th-century, but heat effects, due mainly to infant deaths from digestive diseases, largely disappeared after WWI. The resulting change in the temperature-mortality relationship meant that thousands of heat-related deaths–equal to 0.8-1.3 percent of all deaths–were averted. Our findings also indicate that a series of hot years in the 1890s substantially changed the timing of the infant mortality decline in London.

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Citation

Hanlon, W, C Hansen and J Kantor (2020), ‘DP14851 Temperature, Disease, and Death in London: Analyzing Weekly Data for the Century from 1866-1965‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 14851. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp14851