Volume 31 - Article 39 | Pages 1199–1228
Mortality selection in the first three months of life and survival in the following thirty-three months in rural Veneto (North-East Italy) from 1816 to 1835
By Leonardo Piccione, Gianpiero Dalla Zuanna, Alessandra Minello
Abstract
Background: A number of studies have examined the influence of life conditions in infancy (and pregnancy) on mortality risks in adulthood or old age. For those individuals who survived difficult life conditions, some scholars have found a prevalence of positive selection (relatively low mortality within the population), while others have observed the prevalence of a so-called scar-effect (relatively high mortality within the population).
Objective: Using micro-data characterized by broad internal mortality differences before the demographic transition (seven parishes within the region of Veneto, North-East Italy, 1816-35), we aim to understand whether children who survived high mortality risks during the first three months of life (early infant mortality) had a higher or a lower probability of surviving during the following 33 months (late infant mortality).
Methods: Using a Cox regression, we model the risk of dying during the period of 3-35 months of age, considering mortality level survived at age 0-2 months of age as the main explanatory variable.
Results: We show that positive selection prevailed. For cohorts who survived very severe early mortality selection (q0–2>400‰, , where the subscripts are months of age), mortality hazard of death during the following 33 months was 20%-30% lower compared to the cohorts where early mortality selection was relatively small (q0-2<200‰).
Conclusions: This result points to a homeostatic mechanism: mortality variability among the cohorts is, for q0–35, half that of the mortality variability for both q0–2 and q3–35.
Comments: old title: Neonatal selection and mortality in the following months of life
Author’s Affiliation
- Leonardo Piccione - Università degli Studi di Padova (UNIPD), Italy EMAIL
- Gianpiero Dalla Zuanna - Università degli Studi di Padova (UNIPD), Italy EMAIL
- Alessandra Minello - Università degli Studi di Padova (UNIPD), Italy EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
            The growing number of given names as a clue to the beginning of the demographic transition in Europe
            
                Volume 45 - Article 6
        
            First signs of transition: The parallel decline of early baptism and early mortality in the province of Padua (northeast Italy), 1816‒1870
            
                Volume 36 - Article 27
        
            A synthetic measure of mortality using skeletal data from ancient cemeteries: The d index
            
                Volume 38 - Article 65
        
            Siblings and human capital: A comparison between Italy and France
            
                Volume 23 - Article 21
        
            Comparisons of infant mortality in the Austrian Empire Länder using the Tafeln (1851-54)
            
                Volume 22 - Article 26
        
            Social mobility and fertility
            
                Volume 17 - Article 15
        
            Interdependence between sexual debut and church attendance in Italy
            
                Volume 14 - Article 19
        
            The banquet of Aeolus: A familistic interpretation of Italy's lowest low fertility
            
                Volume 4 - Article 5
        
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
            A parametric survival model for child mortality using complex survey data
            
                Volume 53 - Article 26
                | Keywords: 
                    age patterns of mortality,
                    complex survey,
                    low-and-middle-income countries,
                    survival analysis,
                    under-five mortality
        
            Analysing migrant fertility using machine learning techniques: An application of random survival forest to longitudinal data from France
            
                Volume 53 - Article 21
                | Keywords: 
                    fertility,
                    immigrants,
                    machine learning,
                    random survival forest,
                    survival analysis
        
            The impact of population heterogeneity on the age trajectory of neonatal mortality: A study of US births 2008–2014
            
                Volume 53 - Article 7
                | Keywords: 
                    frailty,
                    heterogeneity,
                    heterogeneity,
                    infant mortality,
                    mortality,
                    mortality selection,
                    mortality selection,
                    neonatal mortality,
                    United States of America
        
            Infant mortality among US whites in the 19th century: New evidence from childhood sex ratios
            
                Volume 52 - Article 10
                | Keywords: 
                    19th century,
                    economic development,
                    infant mortality,
                    mortality transition,
                    population health,
                    sex ratio
        
            Decomposition analysis of disparities in infant mortality rates across 27 US states
            
                Volume 50 - Article 40
                | Keywords: 
                    decomposition,
                    health disparities,
                    infant mortality,
                    United States of America
        
Cited References: 54
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar