Work Research Institute, OsloMet-Oslo Metropolitan University, Oslo, Norway.
Influenza Other Respir Viruses. 2018 May;12(3):307-313. doi: 10.1111/irv.12541. Epub 2018 Feb 6.
Whether morbidity from the 1918-19 influenza pandemic discriminated by socioeconomic status has remained a subject of debate for 100 years. In lack of data to study this issue, the recent literature has hypothesized that morbidity was "socially neutral."
To study the associations between influenza-like illness (ILI) and socioeconomic status (SES), gender, and wave during the 1918-19 influenza pandemic.
Availability of incidence data on the 1918-19 pandemic is scarce, in particular for waves other than the "fall wave" October-December 1918. Here, an overlooked survey from Bergen, Norway (n = 10 633), is used to study differences in probabilities of ILI and ILI probability ratios by apartment size as a measure of SES and gender for 3 waves including the waves prior to and after the "fall wave."
Socioeconomic status was negatively associated with ILI in the first wave, but positively associated in the second wave. At all SES levels, men had the highest ILI in the summer, while women had the highest ILI in the fall. There were no SES or gender differences in ILI in the winter of 1919.
For the first time, it is documented a crossover in the role of socioeconomic status in 1918 pandemic morbidity. The poor came down with influenza first, while the rich with less exposure in the first wave had the highest morbidity in the second wave. The study suggests that the socioeconomically disadvantaged should be prioritized if vaccines are of limited availability in a future pandemic.
1918-19 年流感大流行的发病率是否因社会经济地位而有所不同,这一问题已经争论了 100 年。由于缺乏数据来研究这个问题,最近的文献假设发病率是“社会中性的”。
研究 1918-19 年流感大流行期间流感样疾病(ILI)与社会经济地位(SES)、性别和波的关系。
1918-19 年大流行期间发病率数据的可用性非常有限,特别是除了 1918 年 10 月至 12 月的“秋季波”之外的其他波。在这里,利用挪威卑尔根的一项被忽视的调查(n=10633),研究了 SES 大小(以公寓面积衡量)和性别对包括“秋季波”之前和之后的三个波的 ILI 概率和 ILI 概率比的差异。
SES 在第一波与 ILI 呈负相关,但在第二波与 ILI 呈正相关。在所有 SES 水平上,男性在夏季的 ILI 最高,而女性在秋季的 ILI 最高。在 1919 年冬季,SES 或性别在 ILI 方面没有差异。
首次记录了 1918 年大流行发病率中社会经济地位作用的交叉。穷人首先感染流感,而在第一波中接触较少的富人在第二波中发病率最高。这项研究表明,如果未来大流行疫苗供应有限,应优先考虑社会经济地位不利的人群。