scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Socio-economic factors in Infant and child mortality: A cross-national comparison

John Hobcraft, +2 more
- 01 Jul 1984 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 2, pp 193-223
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors used results from the World Fertility Survey (WFS) for 28 countries and examined socioeconomic differences in neonatal, post-neonatal, and child mortality.
Abstract
Using results from the World Fertility Survey (WFS) for 28 countries, socioeconomic differences in neonatal, postneonatal, and child mortality were examined. To maintain some degree of comparability and to make presentation of the results feasible, focus was on 5 variables which are available for each survey. It can be argued that each of the 5 socioeconomic variables considered here--mother's education, mother's work status since marriage, current or most recent husband of mother's occupation and education, and current type of place of residence of mother--affects infant and child mortality, although often as surrogates for other variables which were usually not directly available. For over 24 countries, the neonatal mortality rate varied from 84 in Nepal to 15 in Malaysia. In Nepal the rate for children of the skilled and unskilled was high (124) but where the husband had received 7 or more years of education the rate of 54 was low. At the other extreme, rates in Malaysia varied from 5 when mother's had 7 or more years of education to 23 for offspring of the least educated husbands. The highest overall postneonatal rate of 89 was again found in Nepal and the lowest national rate in Trinidad and Tobago at 13. In 9 out of 24 countries the high values were over 3 times as great as the low values and the absolute difference exceeded 30/1000 in 13 countries. Differences on child mortality are substantial, reflecting the greater influence of socioeconomic factors on mortality in early childhood. Nationally, the values ranged from 186 in Senegal to a low of 8 in Trinidad and Tobago. In only Haiti, Guyana, and Pakistan did the ratio of the maximum to the minimum rates for sizeable groups fall below 2. At the other extreme, in 5 countries the ratio exceeded 10 and in a further 6 was above 4. Differences between the high and low groups within countries exceeded 30 in 18 out of 28 countries and were over 50 in 10 of these. In 9 countries the highest rates occurred among mothers with no education and in a further 6 among husbands with no education. Education of mother, followed by education of her husband and his occupation were generally the strongest explanatory variables. The work status of the mother was not likely to be an important explanatory variable in these analyses. Results of a multivariate analysis suggested intriguing differences in the relative roles of different socioeconomic variables. Mother's education seemed to play an important role in determining children's chances of surviving in several Latin American and South East Asian countries. In no country did husband's level of education appear in all 3 models. The occupation of the husband was possibly the purest indicator of socioeconomic status, and this factor appeared in the models for all 3 segments of infant and child mortality. Mother's work status appeared least often.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Health Sector in Developing Countries: Problems for the 1990s and Beyond

TL;DR: This review assesses the extent to which programmatic and intellectual emphasis on CCD problems should remain as an appropriate focus in the decade of the 1990s and beyond and believes that more attention will need to be paid to the problems of postepidemiologic transition environments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Socioeconomic inequality in child injury in Bangladesh – implication for developing countries

TL;DR: Despite concentration indices used in this study, the analysis reflected the family's socioeconomic position in a Bangladesh context, showing a very strong statistical association with child mortality.
BookDOI

Drinking Water Salinity and Infant Mortality in Coastal Bangladesh

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of drinking water salinity on infant mortality in coastal Bangladesh and found high significance for salinity exposure during pregnancy and no significance for exposure during the preceding months.
Journal ArticleDOI

Demographers and the study of mortality: scope, perspectives, and theory.

TL;DR: Attempts have been made to effect the convergence of demographic and epidemiological approaches to the analysis of mortality, and they have been more successful in the case of medical demographic than in social demographic approaches.
BookDOI

The Health Impact of Extreme Weather Events in Sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: The results show that both excess rainfall and extreme temperatures significantly raise the incidence of diarrhea and weight-for-height malnutrition among children under the age of three, but have little impact on the long-term health indicators, including height- for-age malnutrition and the under-five mortality rate.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Education as a factor in mortality decline: an examination of Nigerian data

TL;DR: It is concluded that womens education in societies like that of the Yoruba in Nigeria can produce profound changes in family structure and relationships which in turn may influence both mortality and fertility levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of maternal education on infant and child mortality: Levels and causes☆

TL;DR: Data from the World Fertility Survey in ten Third World countries are used to test the conclusion, based on a Nigerian study, that material education is important in reducing child mortality and suggest that schooling introduces parents to a global culture of largely Western origin and loosens their ties to traditional cultures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some Elementary Results on Poisson Approximation in a Sequence of Bernoulli Trials

Robert Serfling
- 01 Jul 1978 - 
TL;DR: In a finite series of independent success-failure trials, the total number of successes has a binomial probability distribution as mentioned in this paper, and it is a classical result that this probability distribution is subje...

Multiplicative Poisson Models with Unequal Cell Rates

TL;DR: In this article, a two way frequency table with independent Poisson distributed cell numbers is considered and the expected number in each cell is a product of a row effect, a column effect and a known constant.
Related Papers (5)