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Data from an historical population in which fertility control was minimal and modern health services were mostly unavailable are used to show that there appears to have been a strong association between previous birth interval length and infant mortality, especially when the previous child survived. Although only imperfect proxies for breast-feeding practices and other potentially confounding factors are available for this population, the results suggest that the association between previous interval length and infant mortality in this population is not solely, or primarily, a function of differences in breast-feeding behaviour or socioeconomic status. Other factors, e.g. maternal depletion or sibling competition, are more likely to explain the observed association.

作者:A R, Pebley;A I, Hermalin;J, Knodel

来源:Journal of biosocial science 1991 年 23卷 4期

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作者:
A R, Pebley;A I, Hermalin;J, Knodel
来源:
Journal of biosocial science 1991 年 23卷 4期
标签:
Age Factors Biology Birth Intervals Birth Order Breast Feeding Demographic Factors Demography Developed Countries Europe Family And Household Family Characteristics Family Relationships Family Research Family Size Fertility Fertility Measurements Genealogies Germany, Federal Republic Of Health Historical Demography Historical Survey Infant Mortality Infant Nutrition Maternal Age Mortality Mortality Determinants Nutrition Parental Age Parish Registers Population Population Characteristics Population Dynamics Population Statistics Research Methodology Research Report Risk Factors Social Sciences Statistical Studies Studies Western Europe
Data from an historical population in which fertility control was minimal and modern health services were mostly unavailable are used to show that there appears to have been a strong association between previous birth interval length and infant mortality, especially when the previous child survived. Although only imperfect proxies for breast-feeding practices and other potentially confounding factors are available for this population, the results suggest that the association between previous interval length and infant mortality in this population is not solely, or primarily, a function of differences in breast-feeding behaviour or socioeconomic status. Other factors, e.g. maternal depletion or sibling competition, are more likely to explain the observed association.