Selection and Adaptation Components of Infant Mortality

Jonas Schöley, James Oeppen, Rune Lindahl-Jacobsen, James W. Vaupel

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Abstract

We test the selection hypothesis of infant mortality against the adaptation hypothesis by decomposing the mortality age pattern over the first year of life into an adaptation- and a selection component. We show that the population level decline in mortality over the first hour of life is significantly influenced by mortality selection, i.e.~the frailest infants leaving the population shortly after birth. The subsequent mortality decline predominantly results from mortality changes observed in homogeneous sub-populations. This confirms the common view of the infant mortality age pattern being caused by adaptation on an individual level. The analysis is informed by detailed micro-data on births and infant deaths in the United States including more than 25 million births and 162,546 deaths. No parametric assumptions were necessary.
Original languageEnglish
Publication date30. Oct 2017
Publication statusPublished - 30. Oct 2017
EventInternational Population Conference 2017 - Cape Town International Convention Centre (CTICC), Cape Town, South Africa
Duration: 29. Oct 20174. Nov 2017
Conference number: 2017
https://iussp.confex.com/iussp/ipc2017/

Conference

ConferenceInternational Population Conference 2017
Number2017
LocationCape Town International Convention Centre (CTICC)
Country/TerritorySouth Africa
CityCape Town
Period29/10/201704/11/2017
Internet address

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