User Settings
Open AccessArticle

A tale of two continents: Infant death clustering in India and sub-Saharan Africa

Nyovani Madise,Zoë Matthews,Alison Whitworth-2003-01-01-ePrints Soton (University of Southampton)

TL;DRAbstract

The reasons for death clustering within families and the mechanisms which give rise to the phenomena are of interest to researchers and policymakers. Multilevel discrete-time hazard models are fitted to data from 34 demographic and health surveys from India and Africa to estimate the magnitude of death clustering within families after adjusting for socio-economic and demographic factors. A further stage of the analysis relates death clustering with country-level social, economic, and development indicators. The results show that levels of death clustering are lower in India than in Africa with average intra-family correlation coefficients of 0.01 in India and 0.05 in Africa. A positive association is found of death clustering with poverty, HIV prevalence, overall mortality and fertility, but the association with aggregate income and child under-nutrition is negative. Death clustering is higher in those Indian states with wider gender inequality in literacy.

Chat with Paper

AI Agents for this Paper

The reasons for death clustering within families and the mechanisms which give rise to the phenomena are of interest to researchers and policymakers. Multilevel discrete-time hazard models are fitted to data from 34 demographic and health surveys from India and Africa to estimate the magnitude of death clustering within families after adjusting for socio-economic and demographic factors. A further stage of the analysis relates death clustering with country-level social, economic, and development indicators. The results show that levels of death clustering are lower in India than in Africa with average intra-family correlation coefficients of 0.01 in India and 0.05 in Africa. A positive association is found of death clustering with poverty, HIV prevalence, overall mortality and fertility, but the association with aggregate income and child under-nutrition is negative. Death clustering is higher in those Indian states with wider gender inequality in literacy.

Keywords

Cluster analysisChild mortalityDemographyPovertyGeographyInfant mortalityFertilityPopulation

Chat

Click to start Chat