“…6 To reduce the bias resulting from the fluctuation in the second half of the 1980s, we compare death rates to 1980. those who kept their job but experienced higher workload and decreased control at work were at higher risk of dying (Lundberg et al 2007;Pikhart et al 2001). Qualitative research also revealed that deindustrialization in former socialist industrial towns led to social disintegration, status loss, the loss of communities, and a cascade of infrastructural, social, and health problems, depression, prolonged stress, and despair both in Russia and Hungary (Hegedűs 2010;Kideckel 2008;Parsons 2014;Scheiring 2020a). Growing depressive symptoms, despair, and distress were also robustly correlated with Hungarians' increased mortality (Kopp et al 2000;Kopp et al 2007).…”