A quick graphical summary of "Disease and Development: Evidence from Hookworm Eradication in the American South."
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Rockefeller takes on Hookworm in the South, circa 1910.
Source for graphic: Wall Street Journal, graphic accompanying Wessel column,
1/16/03, p2.
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There was substantial heterogeneity across areas, largely due to soil type.
Map of pre-eradication hookworm intensities (red = more infection. green = less. blue = no data):
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Highly Infected Areas Saw Greater Declines in Hookworm
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Highly Infected Areas Saw Greater Increases in School Attendance
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The Shift in School Attendance Coincided with the Rockefeller Anti-Hookworm Campaign
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Areas with High Pre-Eradication Hookworm Saw Faster Cross-Cohort Growth in Income.
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The Shift in Income Coincided with Childhood Exposure to Hookworm (the dashed line)
For more information, you can find this study forthcoming in the Quarterly Journal of Economics,
and/or an earlier version was circulated as Stigler Center Working Paper no.
205.
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