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Title: Infant mortality in Bangladesh: trends and differentials. Author: Begum S. Journal: Bangladesh Dev Stud; 1983 Dec; 11(4):17-59. PubMed ID: 12267987. Abstract: Overall mortality decline in contemporary developing countries including Bangladesh has remained a remarkable success story. In Bangladesh, the mortality rate has dropped from about 45/1000 in the early 1920s to about 20/1000 by the mid 1970s. This study investigates recent behavior of infant mortality in Bangladesh. Using 1974 Bangladesh Retrospective Survey of Fertility and Mortality data, infant mortality rates for Bangladesh are obtained by Feeney's method. In understanding trends and differentials of Bangladesh infant mortality it is desirable that one remains confined to the 1960s only instead of the total period covered in the study (1957-1978). During the 1960s urban areas achieved a very steady and distinct improvement in their mortality rates while rural areas at that time could barely maintain a status quo. In the 1960s, parents' education was inversely related to infant mortality; mother's education is far more important than father's education in augmenting the prospect of survival of their children. Findings reveal: 1) despite the fact that Bangladesh has accomplished some decline in overall mortality in recent decades, no corresponding decline has taken place in infant mortality; 2) the absence of mortality improvement is not true for all sub-groups of population while such stagnation holds true for a large marjority; 3) Bangladesh has strong differentials in infant mortality; and 4) these differentials have widened further in recent years. The Bangladesh government has to make a definite attack on death in infancy; about 33% of the total Bangladesh deaths took place at this age, and overall mortality is reducible to that extent by proper policy devices.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]