2021
DOI: 10.1215/00703370-9368970
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Technological Progress and Health Convergence: The Case of Penicillin in Postwar Italy

Abstract: Throughout history, technological progress has transformed population health, but the distributional effects of these gains are unclear. New substitutes for older, more expensive health technologies can produce convergence in population health outcomes but may also be prone to elite capture and thus divergence. We study the case of penicillin using detailed historical mortality statistics and exploiting its abruptly timed introduction in Italy after WWII. We find that penicillin reduced both the mean and stand… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Collective measures leveled the playing field and brought the biggest benefits to those unable to take costly and complicated private measures to avoid the disease within their crowded homes. Similar to findings in studies on the introduction of antibiotics, the impact of the measures was more pronounced in contexts where controlling infections through other means was more challenging (Vecchi 2017; Alsan et al 2021: 112).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 67%
“…Collective measures leveled the playing field and brought the biggest benefits to those unable to take costly and complicated private measures to avoid the disease within their crowded homes. Similar to findings in studies on the introduction of antibiotics, the impact of the measures was more pronounced in contexts where controlling infections through other means was more challenging (Vecchi 2017; Alsan et al 2021: 112).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 67%
“…Jayachandran et al [10] showed that new drug technology can benefit non-Black more than Black patients in the United States. Alsan et al [11] summarised the tension between research suggesting that new health technology was captured by elites versus improving health for all.) Given the speed of the introduction of digital consultation technology, it is relevant to study how this technological development has been adopted by different societal groups.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Health interventions that reduce infant and child mortality-such as prenatal and postnatal care and vaccines-may have important implications for the demand for children and long-term population growth. Fewer deaths may increase the cohort size of children and increase the population growth rate in the short term, especially following medical or public health breakthroughs in infant survival such as the advent of new drugs (Alsan et al, 2021;Bhalotra and Venkataramani, 2011;Jayachandran et al, 2010;Keenan et al, 2018). However, child mortality and population fertility rates often move downward together over a longer time horizon (Bhalotra et al, 2022;Bloom et al, 2020;Doepke, 2005;Galor, 2012;Palloni and Rafalimanana, 1999;Soares, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%