The impact of breast feeding patterns on the biometric analysis of infant mortality

Author:

Knodel John1,Kintner Hallie1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109

Abstract

Abstract A major assumption of the biometric analysis of infant mortality as developed by Bourgeois-Pichat is that the age structure of infant deaths after the first month of life is virtually constant across time and cultures. Reanalysis of results from studies which compare the mortality of infants according to the type of feeding indicated that the relationship between mortality and age within the first year of life followed different patterns for breast fed and artificially fed infants. Historical data for populations with different breast feeding customs reveal similar differences in the age pattern of infant mortality. In populations where breast feeding was uncommon or of very short duration, infant mortality rises particularly steeply during the early months of the first year of life. The age structure of infant mortality in less developed countries where breast feeding is decreasing rapidly may be similarly affected. When substantial deviations from the linear relationship are evident, particular caution is required in applying the biometric technique, since in such situations the estimated endogenous mortality is very much affected by the particular set of data points within the first year of life which are chosen for the basis of the estimates.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference29 articles.

1. Nutrition and Mortality in Infancy and Early Childhood: Past and Present Relationships;Aykroyd;The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,1971

2. De la Mesure de la Mortalité Infantile;Bourgeois-Pichat;Population,1946

3. Analyse de la Mortalité Infantile;Bourgeois-Pichat;Revue de I’lnstitut International de Statistiques,1950

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