Infant mortality and family welfare: policy implications for Indonesia
Open Access
- 1 July 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
- Vol. 57 (7) , 493-498
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jech.57.7.493
Abstract
Study objective: To examine the effect of family welfare index (FWI) and maternal education on the probability of infant death. Design: A population based multistage stratified clustered survey. Setting: Women of reproductive age in Indonesia between 1983–1997. Data sources: The 1997 Indonesian Demographic and Health Survey. Main results: Infant mortality was associated with FWI and maternal education. Relative to families of high FWI, the risk of infant death was almost twice among families of low FWI (aOR=1.7, 95%CI=0.9 to 3.3), and three times for families of medium FWI (aOR=3.3 ,95%CI=1.7 to 6.5). Also, the risk of infant death was threefold higher (aOR=3.4, 95% CI=1.6 to 7.1) among mothers who had fewer than seven years of formal education compared with mothers with more than seven years of education. Fertility related indicators such as young maternal age, absence from contraception, birth intervals, and prenatal care, seem to exert significant effect on the increased probability of infant death. Conclusions: The increased probability of infant mortality attributable to family income inequality and low maternal education seems to work through pathways of material deprivation and chronic psychological stress that affect a person’s health damaging behaviours. The policies that are likely to significantly reduce the family’s socioeconomic inequality in infant mortality are implicated.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social and Economic Disparities in Health: Thoughts about InterventionThe Milbank Quarterly, 1998
- Comment: income, inequality, and social cohesion.American Journal of Public Health, 1997
- Indonesia 1994: Results from the Demographic and Health SurveyStudies in Family Planning, 1996
- Social determinants of health--socioeconomic status, social class, and ethnicity.American Journal of Public Health, 1995
- The impact of extreme prematurity and congenital anomalies on the interpretation of international comparisons of infant mortalityObstetrics & Gynecology, 1995
- Risk Factors for Infant Mortality in Nineteenth-Century SwedenPopulation Studies, 1994
- A comparison of empirical models on determinants of infant mortality: A cross-national study on AfricaHealth Policy, 1993
- Indonesia 1991: Results from the Demographic and Health SurveyStudies in Family Planning, 1993
- National mortality rates: the impact of inequality?American Journal of Public Health, 1992
- The Social Component of Mortality Decline: An Investigation in South India Employing Alternative MethodologiesPopulation Studies, 1983