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Long-term Mortality of War Cohorts: The Case of Finland

Jan Saarela () and Fjalar Finnäs ()
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Jan Saarela: Åbo Akademi University
Fjalar Finnäs: Åbo Akademi University

European Journal of Population, 2012, vol. 28, issue 1, No 1, 15 pages

Abstract: Abstract The system of full mobilisation and the modest effects of the World War II events on the civil population make Finland a highly useful case for exploring whether war veterans have elevated long-term mortality risks. Using data from the Human Mortality Database and a register-based micro sample with main causes of death, we study men in the cohorts who participated in the wars against the Soviet Union in 1939–1944. For these war cohorts, we find no indications of reduced survival after the early 1950s, as compared with male cohorts without combat experience. The absence of a long-term effect might be an artefact of mortality selection. In the first few years after war-end, death rates remained relatively high because of infectious diseases that killed off the weakest of the survivors. The results are in line with a series of other studies and illustrate that in the potential presence of cohort inversion there are no visible long-term effects of war experience on later-life survival.

Keywords: Long-term mortality; War cohorts; Finland; Mortality selection; Mortalité à long-terme; Cohortes de guerre; Finlande; Effet de sélection de la mortalité (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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DOI: 10.1007/s10680-011-9246-x

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