Seasonal fluctuations in mortality are a persistent phenomenon,
but variations from culture to culture pose fascinating questions.
This book investigates whether sociodemographic and socioeconomic
factors play a role as important for seasonal mortality as they do
for mortality in general. Using modern statistical methods, the
book shows, for example, that in the United States the fluctuations
between winter and summer mortality are smaller the more years
someone has spent in school.
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