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Effect of Maternal Healthcare Utilization on Early Neonatal, Neonatal and Post-Neonatal Mortality in India

Community Health Equity Research & Policy, 2021
This paper examines the effect of maternal healthcare utilization on early neonatal, neonatal and post-neonatal mortality in India using the recent round of National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4) data. At the national level, for the last live birth of women during the five year preceding the survey, the early neonatal mortality rate was about 16 ...
Bal Govind Chauhan   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Post-neonatal infant mortality in Malawi: the importance of maternal health

Annals of Tropical Paediatrics, 2004
In a cohort study of mothers and their infants, information was collected from women attending the antenatal services of two hospitals in a rural area of Malawi and 561 of their babies were enrolled in a follow-up study. There were 128 with a low birthweight (LBW,
Francine H, Verhoeff   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Post Neonatal Mortality Rates — Scotland

Scottish Medical Journal, 1989
Post Neonatal Mortality Rates in Scotland have been equal to those of North and South England since 1975. In this respect there is no longer any inequality in health. However, Social Class V still has a higher rate than Social Class 1 and the rate for illegitimates is the same as for Social Class V. As a result the illegitimate rate remains much higher
openaire   +2 more sources

POST‐NEONATAL INFANT MORTALITY IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA

Medical Journal of Australia, 1981
A review of the causes of death of infants who died between two weeks and two years of age in South Australia in the 10-year period from 1970 to 1979 inclusive is presented. (EXCERPT)
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Size at birth and neonatal and postneonatal mortality

Acta Paediatrica, 2002
Birthweight is a crude indicator of size at birth. Some neonatologists and obstetricians have advocated the use of ponderal index and birthlength to characterize size at birth. This paper examines the associations between various size‐at‐birth indicators and neonatal and postneonatal mortality, with an emphasis on ponderal index and birthlength.
Karlberg, JPE, Yip, PSF, Cheung, YB
openaire   +5 more sources

Infant feeding and post-neonatal mortality in Derbyshire, England, in the early twentieth century

Population Studies, 2002
This paper examines influences on post-neonatal mortality in Derbyshire (England) in the early twentieth century, by applying multivariate hazard analysis to a rare individual-level data set. The data allow detailed patterns of breastfeeding and weaning to be examined.
openaire   +2 more sources

Twin differences in birth weight: The effects of genotype and prenatal environment on neonatal and post-neonatal mortality

Economics & Human Biology, 2006
There is much evidence to suggest that both genes and prenatal environment influence life chances. However, recent within-twin estimates also raise questions about how the influence of genes and prenatal environment may vary across different subgroups of a population and over time.
Dalton, Conley   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The use of logit models to investigate social and biological factors in infant mortality. V: A multilogit analysis of stillbirths, neonatal and post‐neonatal mortality

Statistics in Medicine, 1990
AbstractInfant mortality data for England and Wales, cross classified by mother's age, parity and social class were published for 1949/50 and 1975. Previous analyses of these data have been based on graphical, tabular and logit models of stillbirths, neonatal and post‐neonatal deaths separately.
T J, Murrells, T M, Smith, D, Machin
openaire   +2 more sources

Effect of Maternal Healthcare Utilization on Early Neonatal, Neonatal and Post-Neonatal Mortality in India

International Quarterly of Community Health Education, 2022
Bal Govind Chauhan, Manoj Alagarajan
exaly  

[Causes and risk factors in post-neonatal mortality in France in 1987 according to a national survey].

Revue d'epidemiologie et de sante publique, 1992
A stagnation in postneonatal mortality (28 days-1 year) is reported in France as in other similar countries. More than fifty per cent of these deaths are registered under the sudden infant death syndrome, a cause which is classified in the symptoms and ill-defined conditions chapter of the International Classification of Diseases.
M H, Bouvier-Colle   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

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