Louis-René Villermé

Louis-René Villermé
Portrait of Louis-René Villermé by Louis-Léopold Boilly
Born(1782-03-10)10 March 1782
Paris, France
Died16 November 1863(1863-11-16) (aged 81)
Paris, France
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine, Social epidemiology, Sociology, Hygienic reform

Louis-René Villermé (10 March 1782 – 16 November 1863) was a French economist and physician. He was known for his early studies of social epidemiology, or the effects of socioeconomic status on health, in early industrial France, and was an advocate for hygienic reform in factories and prisons. His work is considered pivotal in the history of the fields of sociology and statistical inquiry, and he is considered a founder of epidemiology.

Villermé published works on the conditions in prisons in France, and the benefits of helping prisoners return to outside life when their sentences ended. Another concerned the role of industrialization on the general health and quality of life of working-class people. His best-known work was concerned with workers in the cotton, wool, and silk industries, including the children that worked in the mills.