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Socio-economic factors in Infant and child mortality: A cross-national comparison
371
Citations
5
References
1984
Year
Mortality StudiesSocial Determinants Of HealthWorld Fertility SurveyHealth InequityPublic HealthSocio-economic ImpactsDemographic ForecastingLife ExpectancyHealth SciencesAfrican DevelopmentEarly MarriageDemographic ChangeAsian CountriesEconomic DemographyChild MortalityBirth OutcomesChild HealthGlobal HealthPediatricsDemography
The study examines five socio‑economic correlates of infant and child mortality across 28 developing countries using World Fertility Survey data. Mortality was compared across five life‑segments by mother’s education, mother’s work status, husband’s occupation, husband’s education, and residence type, using tabular and multivariate analyses to evaluate each variable’s relative importance. The analysis found that mother’s education and husband’s occupation and education most strongly drive mortality differences, which widen with age, vary by region (mother’s education in Asia, husband’s education in the Americas, and both factors in Africa), and are especially pronounced between the first and fourth birthdays.
Summary In this paper five socio-economic correlates of infant and child mortality are considered using results from World Fertility Survey enquiries in 28 developing countries. We consider differences in mortality for segments of life during the first five years on each of the following variables: mother's education, mother's work status, husband's occupation, husband's education and type of place of residence. A simple tabular analysis is followed by a multivariate approach in order to assess the relative importance of each of the five variables. In general, differences are most strongly associated with only three of the variables considered: mother's education and the husband's occupation and education. Socioeconomic differences increase with age through the first five years of life. Levels of mother's education seem to be particularly strongly associated with mortality during the first five years of life in the Asian countries, while husband's education is more important in the Americas. Child mortality for the few African countries is found to be relatively strongly associated with husband's occupation and education. Socio-economic differences, especially for mortality between the first and fourth birthday, are often appallingly large.
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