Pursuing the limits of child survival in the most and least developed countries

Author:

Mejía-Guevara Iván,Zuo Wenyun,Mortensen Laust H.,Tuljapurkar Shripad

Abstract

Summary paragraphThe epidemiological transition from young to old deaths in high-income countries reduced mortality at all ages, but a major role was played by a decline of infant and child mortality from infectious diseases1,2 that greatly increased life expectancy at birth2,3. Over time, declines in infectious disease continue but chronic and degenerative causes persist4,5, so we might expect under-5 deaths to be concentrated in the first month of life. However, little is known about the age-pattern of this transition in early mortality or its potential limits. Here we first describe the limit using detailed data on Denmark, Japan, France, and the USA— developed countries with low under-5 mortality. The limiting pattern of under-5 deaths concentrates in the first month, but is surprisingly dispersed over later ages: we call this the early rectangularization of mortality. Then we examine the progress towards this limit of 31 developing countries from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)—the region with the highest under-5 mortality6. In these countries, we find that early deaths have large age-heterogeneities; and that the age patterns of death is an important marker of progress in the mortality transition at early ages. But a negative association between national income and under-5 mortality levels, confirmed here, does not help explain reductions in child mortality during the transition.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference51 articles.

1. Aging, Natural Death, and the Compression of Morbidity

2. Cutler, D. & Meara, E. Changes in the Age Distribution of Mortality over the Twentieth Century. in Perspectives on the Economics of Aging (ed. Wise, D. ) (University of Chicago Press, 2004).

3. Keyfitz, N. Applied Mathematical Demography. (Springer, 2005).

4. La mesure de la mortalité infantile. Principes et méthodes;Population,1951

5. La mesure de la mortalité infantile. II. Les causes de décès;Population,1951

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