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Risk Factors for Infant Mortality in Nineteenth-Century Sweden
Authors:Katherine A Lynch  Joel B Greenhouse
Institution:1. Department of History, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213-3890;2. Department of Statistics, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213-3890
Abstract:This study examines risk factors for infant mortality using individual-level data from a sample of parishes in northern Sweden in the nineteenth century. Sweden is of particular interest because of its unusually regular pattern of infant mortality decline during the century. We follow a sample of women longitudinally through their successive pregnancies and observe the mortality experience of each child. Exploratory and multivariate logistic regression analyses reveal an important intra-familial dimension to infant mortality that appears from the early stages of a woman's reproductive career. In addition, multivariate analyses by birth-order group suggest that ignoring intra-familial correlations of infant mortality may result in incorrect inferences. Siblings' shared probabilities of dying as infants suggest that high-birth-order children were not necessarily disadvantaged in any systematic way.
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