Publication | Closed Access
Neo-natal mortality in South Asia: The special role of tetanus
29
Citations
4
References
1980
Year
Neo-natal Tetanus MortalityPopulation ScienceEpidemiologic ResearchEpidemiologic MethodPublic HealthDevelopmental EpidemiologyLife ExpectancyPopulationRural Uttar PradeshPerinatal EpidemiologyEpidemiologySummary First-year MortalityHuman Population PlanningFemale InfanticideRural HealthInternational HealthLife Course EpidemiologyDemographySouth Asia
Summary First-year mortality in rural Uttar Pradesh is characterized by a predominance (60 per cent) of deaths during the first month of life, of which 66 per cent are reported to be due to tetanus. This pattern is not typical of the historical experience of many developed countries and the current experience of some less developed countries where post-neo-natal mortality predominates. To examine this phenomenon, two causal models of neo-natal mortality (one for tetanus and one for all other diseases) are developed and tested using retrospective survey data from 2000 couples living in rural Uttar Pradesh. Neo-natal tetanus mortality is found to be primarily a function of opportunities for exposure to the disease (e.g. lack of antiseptic birth practices, ownership of large animals) rather than of socio-economic status or demographic variables. The importance of examining neo-natal mortality by cause, and the shortcomings inherent in making inferences from the historical experiences of Western nations are emphasized.
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