Volume 11 - Article 13 | Pages 357–394

Perinatal mortality in the Netherlands. Backgrounds of a worsening international ranking

By Joop Garssen, Anouschka van der Meulen

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Date received:22 Sep 2004
Date published:15 Dec 2004
Word count:10074
Keywords:ethnicity, foetal mortality, infant and child mortality, mortality, multiple births, neonatal mortality, perinatal mortality, Peristat, risk factors
DOI:10.4054/DemRes.2004.11.13
 

Abstract

Perinatal mortality rates have dropped sharply in the past few decades, in the Netherlands as well as in all other European countries. However, as the decrease has generally slowed down since the 1980s, the Netherlands has lost its prominent position in the international ranking of countries with favourable perinatal mortality rates. This lower ranking is not only the result of the dialectics of progress, but also the consequence of a relatively restrained use of antenatal diagnostics. In addition, the Netherlands is among the European countries scoring highest on a number of important risk factors.
This article examines the effect on perinatal mortality rates of known risk factors, in particular the presence of non-western foreigners, multiple births and older mothers. With respect to the latter factor, it is concluded that children of older mothers run a significantly higher risk of foetal mortality, whereas babies of young mothers (including women in their early twenties) run a higher risk of infant mortality. For babies of non-western mothers, infant mortality rates are higher, although there are substantial differences between ethnic backgrounds.
First week mortality is most unfavourable for Surinamese and Antillean/Aruban children, and post-neonatal mortality is highest among Turkish and Moroccan babies. The fact that relatively many non-western foreigners from countries with relatively high risks of perinatal mortality have settled in the Netherlands, is one of the reasons for the fall in the international ranking. Lastly, the increase in the number of multiple births has been stronger in the Netherlands than in most other countries. The higher incidence of assisted reproduction explains most of this increase.

Author's Affiliation

Joop Garssen - Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek (CBS), the Netherlands [Email]
Anouschka van der Meulen - Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek (CBS), the Netherlands [Email]

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

» 150 Years of temperature-related excess mortality in the Netherlands
Volume 21 - Article 14

» Fertility of Turkish and Moroccan women in the Netherlands: Adjustment to native level within one generation
Volume 19 - Article 33

» The Netherlands:Paradigm or Exception in Western Europe’s Demography?
Volume 7 - Article 12

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