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1.
Science ; 380(6650): 1097, 2023 06 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37319210

ABSTRACT

Research links structural racism of 1900s U.S. society to striking disparities in childhood mortality.


Subject(s)
Black or African American , Child Mortality , Health Status Disparities , Racism , Social Segregation , Humans , Black or African American/history , Racism/history , Social Segregation/history , United States , White , Child Mortality/history , Child
2.
Asclepio ; 74(1): 1-14, jun. 2022.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-203280

ABSTRACT

This article analyzes the relationship between infant mortality and milk consumption in the Province of Santiago during 1930-1962. The process studied begins with the Pasteurization Law, which by sanitizing milk reduced the number of children with gastrointestinal diseases and indeed mortality, and ends with the inauguration of milk distribution programs. It is argued that the scarcity and insufficient hygiene of this product, added to the cultural and housing conditions that surrounded the children, are explanatory factors for the high mortality of infants, while recognizing the State as a fundamental promoter of public policies to correct the demographic catastrophe. The research, supported by newspapers, medical journals, degree theses, statistical yearbooks, and government documents, concludes that the set of laws, regulations and state programs produced a set of changes among State actors, reflected in practices and approval discourses and rejection of the importance of sanitizing milk, which, ultimately, did not prevent a considerable decrease in the number of children who died for food reasons


Este artículo analiza la relación entre la mortalidad en la infancia y el consumo de leche en la Provincia de Santiago durante 1930-1962. El proceso estudiado comienza con la Ley de Pasteurización que al higienizar la leche redujo las cifras de niños con enfermedades gastrointestinales y en efecto la mortalidad, y finaliza con la inauguración de los programas de distribución de leche. Se argumenta que la escasez y la higiene insuficiente de ese producto sumadas a las condiciones culturales y habitacionales que rodeaban a los niños son factores explicativos de la mortalidad alta de infantes, a la vez que reconoce en el Estado un promotor fundamental de políticas públicas para subsanar la catástrofe demográfica. La investigación, sustentada en periódicos, revistas médicas, tesis de titulación, anuarios estadísticos, y documentos gubernamentales, concluye que el conjunto de leyes, reglamentos y programas estatales produjo un conjunto de cambios entre los actores del Estado, reflejados en prácticas y discursos de aprobación y rechazo hacia la importancia de higienizar la leche que, en última instancia, no impidieron una disminución considerable de niños muertos por razones alimentarias.


Subject(s)
Infant , Health Sciences , Child Mortality/history , Breast Feeding/history , Child Nutrition , Public Policy/history , Health Policy
4.
BMC Med ; 18(1): 405, 2020 12 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33342436

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Oral rehydration solution (ORS) is a simple intervention that can prevent childhood deaths from severe diarrhea and dehydration. In a previous study, we mapped the use of ORS treatment subnationally and found that ORS coverage increased over time, while the use of home-made alternatives or recommended home fluids (RHF) decreased, in many countries. These patterns were particularly striking within Senegal, Mali, and Sierra Leone. It was unclear, however, whether ORS replaced RHF in these locations or if children were left untreated, and if these patterns were associated with health policy changes. METHODS: We used a Bayesian geostatistical model and data from household surveys to map the percentage of children with diarrhea that received (1) any ORS, (2) only RHF, or (3) no oral rehydration treatment between 2000 and 2018. This approach allowed examination of whether RHF was replaced with ORS before and after interventions, policies, and external events that may have impacted healthcare access. RESULTS: We found that RHF was replaced with ORS in most Sierra Leone districts, except those most impacted by the Ebola outbreak. In addition, RHF was replaced in northern but not in southern Mali, and RHF was not replaced anywhere in Senegal. In Senegal, there was no statistical evidence that a national policy promoting ORS use was associated with increases in coverage. In Sierra Leone, ORS coverage increased following a national policy change that abolished health costs for children. CONCLUSIONS: Children in parts of Mali and Senegal have been left behind during ORS scale-up. Improved messaging on effective diarrhea treatment and/or increased ORS access such as through reducing treatment costs may be needed to prevent child deaths in these areas.


Subject(s)
Diarrhea/therapy , Fluid Therapy , Health Policy/trends , Administration, Oral , Bicarbonates/therapeutic use , Child , Child Mortality/history , Child Mortality/trends , Child, Preschool , Diarrhea/epidemiology , Female , Fluid Therapy/history , Fluid Therapy/methods , Fluid Therapy/statistics & numerical data , Fluid Therapy/trends , Glucose/therapeutic use , Health Policy/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Infant , Male , Mali/epidemiology , Potassium Chloride/therapeutic use , Senegal/epidemiology , Severity of Illness Index , Sierra Leone/epidemiology , Sodium Chloride/therapeutic use , Spatial Analysis , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome
5.
Am J Hum Biol ; 32(2): e23307, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31397002

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: This article aims to determine whether different patterns of mortality occurred among children born during the day and the night respectively, between 1830 and 1929. METHODS: The data include the time of birth and death of 9814 individuals from 10 villages in rural Spain between 1830 and 1929, within a context of natural births at home with little medical support. These data were subjected to a comparative analysis relating to the time of birth and the age at death. RESULTS: Neonatal, infant, and child mortality was higher for children born during daytime. The day-to-night mortality pattern diverged until children were at least 5 years old. CONCLUSIONS: The results confirm that the mortality patterns differed according to the time of birth. Possibly some of these children experienced longer or problematic deliveries that, in the absence of good medical assistance, had health consequences during the following days and years of life.


Subject(s)
Child Mortality/history , Infant Mortality/history , Parturition , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Spain/epidemiology , Time Factors
6.
Glob Health Action ; 12(1): 1623609, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31232229

ABSTRACT

Background: Studies in which the association between temperature and neonatal mortality (deaths during the first 28 days of life) is tracked over extended periods that cover demographic, economic and epidemiological transitions are quite limited. From previous research about the demographic transition in Swedish Sápmi, we know that infant and child mortality was generally higher among the indigenous (Sami) population compared to non-indigenous populations. Objective: The aim of this study was to analyse the association between extreme temperatures and neonatal mortality among the Sami and non-Sami population in Swedish Sápmi (Lapland) during the nineteenth century. Methods: Data from the Demographic Data Base, Umeå University, were used to identify neonatal deaths. We used monthly mean temperature in Tornedalen and identified cold and warm month (5th and 95th) percentiles. Monthly death counts from extreme temperatures were modelled using negative binomial regression. We computed relative risks (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI), adjusting for time trends and seasonality. Results: Overall, the neonatal mortality rate was higher among Sami compared to non-Sami infants (62/1,000 vs 35/1,000 live births), although the differences between the two populations decreased after 1860. For the Sami population prior 1860, the results revealed a higher neonatal incidence rate during cold winter months (<-15.4°C, RR = 1.60, CI 1.14-2.23) compared to infants born during months of medium temperature. No association was found between extreme cold months and neonatal mortality for non-Sami populations. Warm months (+15.1°C) had no impact on Sami or non-Sami populations. Conclusions: This study revealed the role of environmental factors (temperature extremes) on infant health during the demographic transition where cold extremes mainly affected the Sami population. Ethnicity and living conditions contributed to differential weather vulnerability.


Subject(s)
Child Mortality/history , Child Mortality/trends , Extreme Cold/adverse effects , Infant Mortality/history , Infant Mortality/trends , Population Groups/history , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Forecasting , History, 19th Century , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Population Groups/statistics & numerical data , Pregnancy , Sweden/epidemiology
8.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 25(4): 1281-1300, Oct.-Dec. 2018. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-975445

ABSTRACT

Resumen Se exploran las características de la mortalidad infantil en Santiago durante una fase histórica en que los indicadores demográficos alcanzaron cifras altísimas transformándose el fenómeno en un problema médico y político. Luego de comentar algunas investigaciones historiográficas sobre la temática, se demuestra cuantitativamente el comportamiento de la población infantil, recurriendo a fuentes primarias - de la medicina, la prensa y el Registro Civil - y bibliografía. Posteriormente, se describen las causas que las elites esgrimieron para explicar las muertes infantiles: materiales, morales y culturales. Las conclusiones abordan la promulgación de la ley de la infancia desvalida, los inicios de un conocimiento sobre la salud de los niños y la inauguración del Hospital Infantil.


Abstract The article explores the characteristics of infant mortality in Santiago during a historical period in which the demographic indicators reached very high figures turning the phenomenon into a medical and political issue. After commenting on historiographic data, it demonstrates the behavior of the infant population quantitatively, taking into account primary sources - from medicine, the press and civil records - and bibliography. It also exposes the motives employed by the elite to justify the children's deaths: materially, morally and culturally. The conclusion addresses the promulgation of the defenseless child law, the beginnings of knowledge on child health and the inauguration of the Child Hospital.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Infant, Newborn , Child, Preschool , Child , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Infant Mortality/history , Child Mortality/history , Chile , Cities
9.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 25(4): 1281-1300, 2018.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30624490

ABSTRACT

The article explores the characteristics of infant mortality in Santiago during a historical period in which the demographic indicators reached very high figures turning the phenomenon into a medical and political issue. After commenting on historiographic data, it demonstrates the behavior of the infant population quantitatively, taking into account primary sources - from medicine, the press and civil records - and bibliography. It also exposes the motives employed by the elite to justify the children's deaths: materially, morally and culturally. The conclusion addresses the promulgation of the defenseless child law, the beginnings of knowledge on child health and the inauguration of the Child Hospital.


Se exploran las características de la mortalidad infantil en Santiago durante una fase histórica en que los indicadores demográficos alcanzaron cifras altísimas transformándose el fenómeno en un problema médico y político. Luego de comentar algunas investigaciones historiográficas sobre la temática, se demuestra cuantitativamente el comportamiento de la población infantil, recurriendo a fuentes primarias ­ de la medicina, la prensa y el Registro Civil ­ y bibliografía. Posteriormente, se describen las causas que las elites esgrimieron para explicar las muertes infantiles: materiales, morales y culturales. Las conclusiones abordan la promulgación de la ley de la infancia desvalida, los inicios de un conocimiento sobre la salud de los niños y la inauguración del Hospital Infantil.


Subject(s)
Child Mortality/history , Infant Mortality/history , Child , Child, Preschool , Chile , Cities , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Infant , Male
10.
Int J Health Plann Manage ; 32(3): 339-350, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28670754

ABSTRACT

High-quality primary health care (PHC) services are associated with better health outcomes and positive health equity. Providing PHC services to all inhabitants is one of the Chinese government's health care objectives. However, an imbalance between people's increasing health needs and effective health service utilization exists in China. The objective of this review is to identify evidence for PHC development in China and to summarize the challenges as a reference for the future improvement of China's PHC system. Literature searches related to China's PHC were performed in PubMed, Web of Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, and Wan-fang databases. Related data were collected from the China Statistical Yearbook on Health and Family Planning 2003-2016, the China National Health Accounts Report 2015, and An Analysis Report of National Health Services Survey in China, 2013. The PHC network and the population's health have improved in China in recent years, with general practitioners as "gatekeepers" who have gradually taken the initiative to offer health services to residents. The limitation of input and shortages of resources and skilled health care providers may restrict the sustainable development of China's PHC system. Therefore, policy support from the government is necessary.


Subject(s)
Primary Health Care/history , Child , Child Mortality/history , China , Female , General Practitioners/history , General Practitioners/organization & administration , Health Expenditures/history , Health Status , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Maternal Mortality/history , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Universal Health Insurance/history , Universal Health Insurance/organization & administration
13.
Demography ; 54(1): 3-22, 2017 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28070854

ABSTRACT

We use a set of linked reproductive histories taken from Sweden, the Netherlands, and Spain for the period 1871-1960 to address key issues regarding how reproductive change was linked specifically to mortality and survivorship and more generally to individual agency. Using event-history analysis, this study investigates how the propensity to have additional children was influenced by the number of surviving offspring when reproductive decisions were made. The results suggest that couples were continuously regulating their fertility to achieve reproductive goals. Families experiencing child fatalities show significant increases in the hazard of additional births. In addition, the sex composition of the surviving sibset also appears to have influenced reproductive decisions in a significant but changing way. The findings offer strong proof of active decision-making during the demographic transition and provide an important contribution to the literature on the role of mortality for reproductive change.


Subject(s)
Birth Rate/trends , Child Mortality/history , Family Characteristics/history , Population Dynamics/history , Reproductive History , Child , Child Mortality/trends , Europe/epidemiology , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Population Dynamics/statistics & numerical data , Sex Ratio , Socioeconomic Factors
14.
Popul Stud (Camb) ; 70(3): 327-343, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27618970

ABSTRACT

Mounting evidence suggests that early-life conditions have an enduring effect on an individual's mortality risks as an adult. The contribution of improvements in early-life conditions to the overall decline in adult mortality, however, remains a debated issue. We provide an estimate of the contribution of improvements in early-life conditions to mortality decline after age 30 in Dutch cohorts born between 1812 and 1921. We used two proxies for early-life conditions: median height and early-childhood mortality. We estimate that improvements in early-life conditions contributed more than five years or about a third to the rise in women's life expectancy at age 30. Improvements in early-life conditions contributed almost three years or more than a quarter to the rise in men's life expectancy at age 30. Height appears to be the more important of the two proxies for early-life conditions.


Subject(s)
Body Height , Life Expectancy/history , Mortality/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Adult , Age Factors , Child , Child Mortality/history , Child Mortality/trends , Communicable Diseases/epidemiology , Communicable Diseases/history , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Life Expectancy/trends , Male , Malnutrition/epidemiology , Malnutrition/history , Mortality/trends , Netherlands/epidemiology , Sex Factors
15.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 160(4): 653-64, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27100777

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Early-life nutrition is a predisposing factor for later-life outcomes. This study tests the hypothesis that subadults from medieval Trino Vercellese, Italy, who lived to adulthood consumed isotopically different diets compared with subadults who died before reaching adulthood. We have previously used a life history approach, comparing dentine and bone of the same adult individuals ("subadults who lived"), to elucidate dietary variation across the life span. Here, we examine diets of "subadults who died" from the same population, estimated from subadult rib collagen, to explore whether dietary behaviors of subadults who lived differed from those of subadults who died. METHODS: Forty-one subadults aged six months to 14.5 years were studied through stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis of collagen. RESULTS: Individuals were weaned by age 4 years, with considerable variation in weaning ages overall. Post-weaning, diets of subadults who died comprised significantly less animal protein than diets of subadults who lived. Isotopic values of the two oldest individuals, 13.5 and 14.5 years, show the same status-based variation in diet as do adults from the population. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that incorporating animal protein in diet during growth and development supported medieval subadults' ability to survive to adulthood. Isotopic similarities between adults and older subadults suggest "adult" dietary behaviors were adopted in adolescence. Stable isotope evidence from subadults bridges a disparity between ontogenetic age categories and socioculturally meaningful age categories in the past, and sheds light on the underpinnings of health, mortality, growth, and disease in the bioarchaeological record. Am J Phys Anthropol 160:653-664, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Subject(s)
Child Mortality/history , Diet/history , Adolescent , Anthropology, Physical , Bone and Bones/chemistry , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Child , Child, Preschool , Collagen/chemistry , Dentin/chemistry , Female , History, Medieval , Humans , Infant , Male , Nitrogen Isotopes/analysis , Statistics, Nonparametric
16.
PLoS One ; 11(1): e0144908, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26783759

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: From 1990-2010, worldwide child mortality declined by 43%, and maternal mortality declined by 40%. This paper compares two sources of progress: improvements in societal coverage of health determinants versus improvements in the impact of health determinants as a result of technical change. METHODS: This paper decomposes the progress made by 146 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in lowering childhood and maternal mortality into one component due to better health determinants like literacy, income, and health coverage and a second component due to changes in the impact of these health determinants. Health determinants were selected from eight distinct health-impacting sectors. Health determinants were selected from eight distinct health-impacting sectors. Regression models are used to estimate impact size in 1990 and again in 2010. Changes in the levels of health determinants were measured using secondary data. FINDINGS: The model shows that respectively 100% and 89% of the reductions in maternal and child mortality since 1990 were due to improvements in nationwide coverage of health determinants. The relative share of overall improvement attributable to any single determinant varies by country and by model specification. However, in aggregate, approximately 50% of the mortality reductions were due to improvements in the health sector, and the other 50% of the mortality reductions were due to gains outside the health sector. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, countries improved maternal and child health (MCH) from 1990 to 2010 mainly through improvements in the societal coverage of a broad array of health system, social, economic and environmental determinants of child health. These findings vindicate efforts by the global community to obtain such improvements, and align with the post-2015 development agenda that builds on the lessons from the MDGs and highlights the importance of promoting health and sustainable development in a more integrated manner across sectors.


Subject(s)
Child Health/statistics & numerical data , Child Mortality , Maternal Health/statistics & numerical data , Maternal Mortality , Child , Child Health/history , Child Health/trends , Child Mortality/history , Child Mortality/trends , Developing Countries , Epidemiologic Factors , Female , Global Health , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Male , Maternal Health/history , Maternal Health/trends , Maternal Mortality/history , Maternal Mortality/trends , Socioeconomic Factors
17.
Lancet ; 387(10015): 273-83, 2016 Jan 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26510780

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the past two decades, the under-5 mortality rate in China has fallen substantially, but progress with regards to the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 4 at the subnational level has not been quantified. We aimed to estimate under-5 mortality rates in mainland China for the years 1970 to 2012. METHODS: We estimated the under-5 mortality rate for 31 provinces in mainland China between 1970 and 2013 with data from censuses, surveys, surveillance sites, and disease surveillance points. We estimated under-5 mortality rates for 2851 counties in China from 1996 to 2012 with the reported child mortality numbers from the Annual Report System on Maternal and Child Health. We used a small area mortality estimation model, spatiotemporal smoothing, and Gaussian process regression to synthesise data and generate consistent provincial and county-level estimates. We compared progress at the county level with what was expected on the basis of income and educational attainment using an econometric model. We computed Gini coefficients to study the inequality of under-5 mortality rates across counties. FINDINGS: In 2012, the lowest provincial level under-5 mortality rate in China was about five per 1000 livebirths, lower than in Canada, New Zealand, and the USA. The highest provincial level under-5 mortality rate in China was higher than that of Bangladesh. 29 provinces achieved a decrease in under-5 mortality rates twice as fast as the MDG 4 target rate; only two provinces will not achieve MDG 4 by 2015. Although some counties in China have under-5 mortality rates similar to those in the most developed nations in 2012, some have similar rates to those recorded in Burkina Faso and Cameroon. Despite wide differences, the inter-county Gini coefficient has been decreasing. Improvement in maternal education and the economic boom have contributed to the fall in child mortality; more than 60% of the counties in China had rates of decline in under-5 mortality rates significantly faster than expected. Fast reduction in under-5 mortality rates have been recorded not only in the Han population, the dominant ethnic majority in China, but also in the minority populations. All top ten minority groups in terms of population sizes have experienced annual reductions in under-5 mortality rates faster than the MDG 4 target at 4.4%. INTERPRETATION: The reduction of under-5 mortality rates in China at the country, provincial, and county level is an extraordinary success story. Reductions of under-5 mortality rates faster than 8.8% (twice MDG 4 pace) are possible. Extremely rapid declines seem to be related to public policy in addition to socioeconomic progress. Lessons from successful counties should prove valuable for China to intensify efforts for those with unacceptably high under-5 mortality rates. FUNDING: National "Twelfth Five-Year" Plan for Science and Technology Support, National Health and Family Planning Commission of The People's Republic of China, Program for Changjiang Scholars and Innovative Research Team in University, the National Institute on Aging, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.


Subject(s)
Child Mortality , Healthy People Programs , Infant Mortality , Age Factors , Child Mortality/history , Child, Preschool , China/epidemiology , Healthy People Programs/statistics & numerical data , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Infant , Infant Mortality/history , Infant, Newborn , Models, Econometric , Socioeconomic Factors
19.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 157(3): 402-10, 2015 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25711723

ABSTRACT

Physiological disruptions resulting from an impoverished environment during the first years of life are of key importance for the health and biological status of individuals and populations. Studies of growth processes in archaeological populations point to the fact that the main causes of childhood mortality in the past are to be sought among extrinsic factors. Based on this assumption, one would expect random mortality of children, with the deceased individuals representing the entire subadult population. The purpose of this study is to explore whether differences in early childhood survival are reflected in differences in deciduous tooth enamel, which can provide an insight into the development of an individual during prenatal and perinatal ontogeny. Deciduous incisors were taken from 83 individuals aged 2.0-6.5 years from a medieval inhumation cemetery dated AD 1300-1600. Prenatal and postnatal enamel formation time, neonatal line width, and the number of accentuated lines were measured using an optical microscope. The significantly wider neonatal line and the higher frequency of accentuated lines in the enamel of the incisors of children who died at the age of 2-3 years suggest the occurrence of stronger or more frequent stress events in this group. These results indicate that in skeletal populations mortality was not exclusively determined by random external factors. Individuals predisposed by an unfavorable course of prenatal and perinatal growth were more likely to die in early childhood.


Subject(s)
Child Mortality/history , Dental Enamel/pathology , Incisor/pathology , Anthropology, Physical , Archaeology , Child , Child, Preschool , History, Medieval , Humans , Poland
20.
J Biosoc Sci ; 47(4): 449-68, 2015 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25230830

ABSTRACT

Analyses of historical or modern populations indicate a strong relationship between mortality level and standard of living, measured, among other factors, by degree of urbanization. The aim of this study was to assess mortality rates in children of up to 5 years of age in two populations living under different conditions in central modern Poland at the end of the 19th century: the rural parish of Kowal, under Russian partition, and Torun, an industrial and urbanized centre under Prussian partition. Data on births and deaths were taken from birth certificate registries and from the Prussian statistics yearbooks for 1876-1894. Death rates of children aged 0-5 years were calculated, and also for annual age ranges. The urban population had lower birth rates (37.19‰), natural increase rates (8.0‰), population dynamics rates (1.26‰), which provide information about the relation between two components of a natural increase, i.e. births and deaths, and an over-mortality of boys in relation to girls. In the rural population these values were all higher: 53.67‰, 18.11‰ and 1.59‰ respectively. No impact was found of social stratification on child mortality in the wide age group of 0-5 years. However, for subsequent one-year age groups significant relationships between mortality level and size and industrialization level of the population centres were noted. The living conditions of infants in Torun, although being in a better position as an area annexed by Prussia, were markedly worse than those of rural Kowal Parish. In the urban centre infant mortality was slightly over 269 for 1000 live born, and in Kowal Parish it was 163 for 1000 live born. The high infant mortality was balanced in Torun by the higher mortality levels of children aged 2-5 years compared with Kowal Parish. Natural selection in the city had the greatest impact on infants, who did not have the protective influence of breast-feeding because women had to return to work shortly after giving birth. The lower infant mortality of mothers in the countryside due to longer breast-feeding led to larger family sizes. In 1871-1890 in the villages the number of children per women was about 7.42, whereas in Torun it ranged from 4.4 to 5.2. The probability of death among children who survived the first year of life was higher in the countryside than the town. In the rural parish, perhaps because of cultural factors such as breast-feeding or working practices making full-time baby-sitting possible, children who did not reach the age of 1 year were not subjected to such intensive natural selection. Overall, differences in child mortality in the two centres in 19th central Poland resulted from ecological and cultural conditions, rather than from social and economical reasons (living under different partitions).


Subject(s)
Child Mortality/history , Infant Mortality , Rural Population , Socioeconomic Factors , Urban Population , Adult , Birth Certificates , Birth Rate/ethnology , Breast Feeding , Child , Child Mortality/ethnology , Child, Preschool , Female , History, 19th Century , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Poland/epidemiology , Registries , Urban Population/trends
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