2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpp.2018.03.008
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Patterns of frailty in non-adults from medieval London

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Cited by 19 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Attempts have been made to quantify a skeletal frailty index to explore levels of stress and health and survivorship (e.g., Marklein et al, 2016; Marklein & Crews, 2017); however, these require relatively complete skeletons and can still be an imperfect representation of past frailty. Paleodemographic analyses that incorporate various skeletal indicators of stress or disruptions to growth and development can also be used to assess frailty (e.g., DeWitte, 2014; Yaussy & DeWitte, 2018); however, given the complex etiology of these skeletal indicators, it can be difficult to interpret their meaning in the past (Pilloud & Schwitalla, 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Attempts have been made to quantify a skeletal frailty index to explore levels of stress and health and survivorship (e.g., Marklein et al, 2016; Marklein & Crews, 2017); however, these require relatively complete skeletons and can still be an imperfect representation of past frailty. Paleodemographic analyses that incorporate various skeletal indicators of stress or disruptions to growth and development can also be used to assess frailty (e.g., DeWitte, 2014; Yaussy & DeWitte, 2018); however, given the complex etiology of these skeletal indicators, it can be difficult to interpret their meaning in the past (Pilloud & Schwitalla, 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, for all analyses in this study, the minimum age for inclusion in the sample is 15 years. Previous bioarchaeological studies have suggested that non-adults in England were at the greatest risk of death during the medieval period, generally (Lewis, 2016), and during famines, specifically (Yaussy and DeWitte, 2018).…”
Section: Age Estimationmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Previous research on famine mortality patterns in medieval London revealed significant associations between skeletal makers of developmental stress (linear enamel hypoplasia and short achieved adult stature) and burial in famine contexts, suggesting that people who experienced physiological stress early in life were subsequently more likely to die during episodes of medieval famine than would have been true under normal ("attritional") mortality conditions (DeWitte & Yaussy, 2017;Yaussy & DeWitte, 2018;Yaussy, DeWitte, & Redfern, 2016). Further, previous analysis of sex differences in risks of adult mortality under famine and normal mortality conditions (Yaussy et al, 2016) found that prior to the Black Death in London (c. 1349-1350), adult males and females experienced similar risks of mortality under both famine and attritional conditions, but that after the epidemic, adult males experienced lower risks of mortality in the context of attritional (but not famine) mortality conditions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By evaluating the association between LEH prevalence and mean age‐at‐death, bioarchaeologists have demonstrated that individuals with childhood stress in precolonial North America experienced decreased longevity (Cook & Buikstra, 1979; Goodman & Armelagos, 1988; Smith, Kurtenback, & Vermaat, 2016; Wilson, 2014). Recent comparative studies of catastrophic and attritional burials identified an association between LEH presence and increased mortality during epidemic and famine events, indicating that early exposure to stress could have lifelong ramifications on morbidity and mortality‐as reflected by earlier ages‐at‐death (Temple, 2014; Yaussy & DeWitte, 2018; Yaussy, DeWitte, & Redfern, 2016). A comparatively higher prevalence of LEH may also reflect resource scarcity or a genetic predisposition to stress‐related conditions, leading to a lifelong struggle and early mortality (Armelagos et al, 2009; Duray, 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%