Volume 54 - Article 24 | Pages 763–778  

Bringing cause-of-death analysis into demography: An interview with France Meslé

By France Meslé, Agnieszka Fihel, Heini Väisänen

References

Barbieri, M. (2019). The decrease in life expectancy in the United States since 2014. Population and Societies 570: 1–4.

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Frenk, J., Bobadilla, J.L., Stern, C., Frejka, T., and Lozano, R. (1991). Elements for a theory of the health transition. Health Transition Review 1(1): 21–38.

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Grippo, F., Frova, L., Pappagallo, M., Barbieri, M., Trias-Llimós, S., Egidi, V., and Désesquelles, A. (2024). Beyond the underlying cause of death: An algorithm to study multi-morbidity at death. Population Health Metrics 22(36): 1–15.

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Maier, H., Jeune, B., and Vaupel, J.W. (2021). Exceptional lifespans. Demographic Research Monographs 17.

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Meslé, F. (2004). Mortality in Central and Eastern Europe: Long-term trends and recent upturns. Demographic Research S2(3): 45-70.

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Meslé, F. and Vallin, J. (2006). Diverging trends in female old-age mortality: The United States and the Netherlands versus France and Japan. Population and Development Review 32(1): 123–145.

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Meslé, F. and Vallin, J. (1996). Reconstructing long-term series of causes of death. Historical Methods 29(2): 72-87.

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Omran, A. (1971). The epidemiological transition: A theory of the epidemiology of population change. Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 49(4): 509–538.

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Pechholdova, M., Camarda, C. G., Meslé, F., and Vallin, J. (2017). Reconstructing long-term coherent cause-of-death series, a necessary step for analyzing trends. European Journal of Population 33(5): 629–650.

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Vallin, J. and Meslé, F. (2004). Convergences and divergences in mortality: A new approach of health transition. Demographic Research S2(2): 11–44.

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