Louis Israel Dublin (November 1, 1882 – March 7, 1969) was a Jewish Americanstatistician. As vice president and statistician of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, he promoted progressive and socially useful insurance underwriting policies.[1] As a scholar, Dublin was an important figure in the establishment of demography as a social-scientific discipline in the United States during the 1920s and 1930s.[1] Dublin was interested in eugenics but as a Jew of recent immigrant extraction criticized eugenicists for equating biological superiority with Nordic origins.[2]
He died in Winter Park, Orange County, Florida at the age of 86.[dubious – discuss]
Body Mass Index
While serving as a vice president at Met Life Insurance and as a statistician Dublin developed a height for weight table based on longevity of life insurance holders in the early 1940s. These tables would later develop into the Body Mass Index developed by University of Minnesota's cholesterol and heart disease physiology researcher Ancel Keys in 1972. Keys intended the BMI to be used only for the study of groups and not to be applied to individuals. The index is statistically very limited in usefulness as covered a very limited demographic of people who were able to afford life insurance and who were mostly white.[3]
Major works
Louis Israel Dublin, Alfred J. Lotka: The Money Value of a Man (Public Health in America Series). New York : Arno Press, 1977 (Repr. of the 1930 ed. by the Ronald Press Co., New York). ISBN978-0-405-09814-7
with Lee K. Frankel and Miles M. Dawson, Workingmen's Insurance in Europe, 1910[4]
with Lee K. Frankel, Principles of Life Insurance, 1911[4]
Mortality Statistics of Insured Wage Earners and Their Families, 1919[4]
Louis I. Dublin, To Be or Not to Be: a Study of Suicide, 1933. Harrison Smith and Robert Hass, New York.
Louis I. Dublin, A Family of Thirty Million: The Story of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 1943.
Louis I. Dublin, The Facts of Life: From Birth to Death, New York: The Macmillan Company, 1951.
^Ramsden, Edmund (2003). "Social Demography and Eugenics in the Interwar United States". Population and Development Review. 29 (4): 547–593. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4457.2003.00547.x.
"Louis I. Dublin 1882-1969". Statistical Bulletin (Metropolitan Life Insurance Company). 50. UNITED STATES: 2. March 1969. ISSN0026-1513. PMID4897172.
Lilienfeld, David E (June 2009). "Louis I. Dublin and the development of the observational study: the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company natural history (cohort) studies of typhoid fever and scarlet fever". Ann Epidemiol. 19 (6). United States: 410–5. doi:10.1016/j.annepidem.2009.01.014. PMID19460671.
Marquis, Albert Nelson, ed. Who’s Who in America, a Biographical Dictionary of Notable Living Men and Women of the United States, 1926–1927, vol. 14, Chicago: The A.N. Marquis Company, 1926, 624.