id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_dix4u47cvnhnzho6qbjldey6x4 Peter Ekamper Infant mortality in mid‐19th century Amsterdam: Religion, social class, and space 2019 22 .pdf application/pdf 14886 1519 61 Infant mortality in mid-19th century Amsterdam: Religion, social class, and space Infant mortality in mid-19th century Amsterdam: Religion, social https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/infant-mortality-in-mid19th-century-amsterdam(95ab751e-bddb-4cd3-a00f-d99d203f02cb).html This study uses a unique historical GIS dataset compiled from birth, death, and population register records for infants born in the city of Amsterdam in 1851 linked to Amsterdam, egocentric neighbourhood, historical GIS, infant mortality, Netherlands, nineteenth played a greater role than that of the neighbourhood where the religious groups lived, it is necessary to obtain individual‐level information about the religion of the population at risk and of the deceased. To analyse the effect of various sociodemographic characteristics, residential environment, water supply, and health care on infant mortality, we applied Cox's proportional hazards models (Cox, 1972) to our TABLE 2 Cox proportional hazards model hazard ratios (HR) for infant mortality by explanatory and control variables, Amsterdam, children born Particularly for studying infant mortality, the population register data had ./cache/work_dix4u47cvnhnzho6qbjldey6x4.pdf ./txt/work_dix4u47cvnhnzho6qbjldey6x4.txt