Smallman-Raynor M R, Cliff A D
School of Geography,University of Nottingham,University Park,Nottingham,UK.
Department of Geography,University of Cambridge,Downing Place,Cambridge,UK.
Epidemiol Infect. 2015 Oct;143(14):2923-38. doi: 10.1017/S0950268815000175. Epub 2015 Feb 23.
This paper examines the geographical impact of the British Government's wartime evacuation scheme on notified rates of two common acute childhood diseases (scarlet fever and diphtheria) in the 1470 local government districts of England and Wales, 1939-1945. Drawing on the notifications of communicable diseases collated by the General Register Office (GRO), we establish pre-war (baseline) disease rates for the 1470 districts. For the war years, techniques of binary logistic regression analysis are used to assess the associations between (a) above-baseline ('raised') disease rates in evacuation, neutral and reception districts and (b) the major phases of the evacuation scheme. The analysis demonstrates that the evacuation was temporally associated with distinct national and regional effects on notified levels of disease activity. These effects were most pronounced in the early years of the dispersal (1939-1941) and corresponded with initial levels of evacuation-related population change at the regional and district scales.
本文考察了1939年至1945年英国政府战时疏散计划对英格兰和威尔士1470个地方政府辖区内两种常见儿童急性疾病(猩红热和白喉)通报率的地理影响。利用总登记局(GRO)整理的传染病通报信息,我们确定了这1470个辖区的战前(基线)疾病率。对于战争年份,采用二元逻辑回归分析技术来评估(a)疏散区、中立区和接收区高于基线(“上升”)的疾病率与(b)疏散计划的主要阶段之间的关联。分析表明,疏散在时间上与疾病活动通报水平上不同的国家和地区效应相关。这些效应在疏散初期(1939 - 1941年)最为明显,并且与区域和辖区层面与疏散相关的人口变化初始水平相对应。