Modern Medicine and the 20th Century Decline in Mortality: Evidence on the Impact of Sulfa Drugs
51 Pages Posted: 20 Jun 2009 Last revised: 23 Sep 2024
Date Written: June 2009
Abstract
This paper studies the contribution of sulfa drugs, a groundbreaking medical innovation in the 1930s, to declines in U.S. mortality. For several often-fatal infectious diseases, sulfa drugs represented the first effective treatment. Using time-series and difference-in-differences methods (with diseases unaffected by sulfa drugs as a comparison group), we find that sulfa drugs led to a 25 to 40 percent decline in maternal mortality, 17 to 36 percent decline in pneumonia mortality, and 52 to 67 percent decline in scarlet-fever mortality between 1937 and 1943. Altogether, they reduced mortality by 2 to 4 percent and increased life expectancy by 0.4 to 0.8 years. We also find that sulfa drugs benefited whites more than blacks.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Black-White Test Score Gap Through Third Grade
By Roland G. Fryer and Steven D. Levitt
-
Birth Cohort and the Black-White Achievement Gap: The Roles of Access and Health Soon After Birth
By Kenneth Y. Chay, Jonathan Guryan, ...
-
Birth Cohort and the Black-White Achievement Gap: The Roles of Access and Health Soon after Birth
By Kenneth Y. Chay, Jonathan Guryan, ...
-
The Dynamics of School Attainment of Englands Ethnic Minorities
By Adam Briggs, Simon M. Burgess, ...
-
Testing for Racial Differences in the Mental Ability of Young Children
By Roland G. Fryer and Steven D. Levitt
-
Would Equal Opportunity Mean More Mobility?
By Christopher Jencks and Laura Tach
-
School Quality and the Black-White Achievement Gap
By Eric A. Hanushek and Steven G. Rivkin
-
The Academic Achievement Gap in Grades 3 to 8
By Charles T. Clotfelter, Helen F. Ladd, ...