Infant mortality: Difference between revisions

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'''Infant mortality''' is the "rate of deaths occurring in the first year of life". (reference for quote: Medline-Plus Medical dictionary (an on line service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health). Human infancy is defined in the health sciences as the first year of life, and a death rate is calculated over a period of time and according to a defined population. The death rate of infants is an important measure in [[pediatrics]], often referred to when [[physician]]s analyse childhood diseases and congenital defects, but is also an important measure in demographics, and is often referred to by historians, politicians, and civic planners, who use this number as an indicator.
'''Infant mortality''' is the "rate of deaths occurring in the first year of life". (reference for quote: Medline-Plus Medical dictionary (an on line service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health). Human infancy is defined in the health sciences as the first year of life, and a death rate is calculated over a period of time and according to a defined population. The death rate of infants is an important measure in [[pediatrics]], often referred to when [[physician]]s analyse childhood diseases and congenital defects, but is also an important measure in demographics, and is often referred to by historians, politicians, and civic planners, who use this number as an indicator for the socioeconomic status of a given society.


With technological advances in invitro fertilization and health care, the correlation between wealth, access to health care, and high infant survival rates are not straight-forward for all populations.


==Infant mortality as a social indicator==
==Infant mortality as a social indicator==

Revision as of 19:57, 27 May 2007

Infant mortality is the "rate of deaths occurring in the first year of life". (reference for quote: Medline-Plus Medical dictionary (an on line service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health). Human infancy is defined in the health sciences as the first year of life, and a death rate is calculated over a period of time and according to a defined population. The death rate of infants is an important measure in pediatrics, often referred to when physicians analyse childhood diseases and congenital defects, but is also an important measure in demographics, and is often referred to by historians, politicians, and civic planners, who use this number as an indicator for the socioeconomic status of a given society.

With technological advances in invitro fertilization and health care, the correlation between wealth, access to health care, and high infant survival rates are not straight-forward for all populations.

Infant mortality as a social indicator

There is an association between poverty and high infant mortality.


Infant mortality in pediatrics

References

Quantifying and explaining changes in geographical inequality of infant mortality in England and Wales since the 1890s International Journal of Population GeographyVolume 7, Issue 1, Date: January/February 2001, Pages: 35-51 P. Congdon, R. M. Campos, S. E. Curtis, H. R. Southall, I. N. Gregory, I. R. Jones

Patterns of infant mortality caused by major congenital anomalies Teratology Volume 61, Issue 5, Date: May 2000, Pages: 342-346 Shi Wu Wen, Shiliang Liu, K.S. Joseph, Jocelyn Rouleau, Alexander Allen