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Swaminathan, Mina – Les Carnets de l'enfance (Assignment Children), 1973
There are about 70 million children between the ages of 2 and 6 in India and their first problem is to survive. For those who do survive, services supported by the Government and a large number of private institutions operate especially in the field of education. A new approach based on low-cost and integrated services is taking shape. (Author/RJ)
Descriptors: Government Role, Infant Mortality, Neurological Impairments, Nutrition
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Brenner, M. H. – International Journal of Health Services, 1973
One of the most sensitive indicators of the general socioeconomic level of a nation is the infant mortality rate. Evidence indicates that economic recessions and upswings have played a significant role in fetal, infant, and maternal mortality in the last 45 years. (RJ)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Death, Demography, Economic Change
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Mayer, Shirley – Children Today, 1972
Excerpts from a full report which appeared in the City Almanac, a publication of the Center of New York City Affairs of the New School for Social Research. (MB)
Descriptors: Children, Community Centers, Disability Identification, Disease Incidence
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smiley, Jane; And Others – American Journal of Public Health, 1972
First identifies the characteristics of infants and their families which may predict infant illness and failure to use preventive care following delivery, and then uses them to develop a predictive model which may further be tested for usefulness. (JM)
Descriptors: Child Care, Family Characteristics, Health, Infant Mortality
Wheeler, Raymond – New South, 1971
Descriptors: Health Needs, Health Personnel, Housing, Hunger
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hecht, Pamela K.; Cutright, Phillips – Social Forces, 1979
This paper compares the effects of demographic, health, and socioeconomic variables on infant mortality rates in an attempt to identify the sources of racial differences in these rates. (Author/EB)
Descriptors: Blacks, Educational Experience, Family Characteristics, Health Conditions
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Shen, Ce; Williamson, John B. – Social Forces, 1997
Data from 86 developing countries suggest that foreign investment and debt dependency have adverse indirect effects on child mortality--effects mediated by variables linked to industrialism theory and gender stratification theory: women's education, health, and reproductive autonomy and rate of economic growth. State strength was related to lower…
Descriptors: Contraception, Developing Nations, Economic Development, Females
Lyons, Nancee L. – Black Issues in Higher Education, 1989
Statistics suggest that the states with the highest infant mortality rates also have the worst prenatal and health care, resulting in a high proportion of children born at risk of learning disabilities that could later result in low Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) performance. (FMW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, Factor Analysis, Health Services
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Singh, Harmeet K. D. – Policy Review, 1990
Discusses the following barriers to reducing the infant mortality rate: (1) fragmented and bureaucratic federal prenatal care programs; (2) insufficient number of rural public health clinics and private practitioners willing to serve low-income expectant mothers; (3) lack of health insurance; and (4) the high-risk behavior and motivation of…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Demography, Health Promotion, Infant Mortality
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Douret, L.; And Others – Early Child Development and Care, 1994
Outlines the history of and reviews the literature on the care of premature infants. Focuses on the medicalization of birth; early neonatology; the effect of advances in medicine on the survival and safety of neonates; and the importance of early mother-neonate interactions. (BC)
Descriptors: Birth, Early Intervention, History, Infant Mortality
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Almqvist-Tangen, Gerd; Axelsson, Asa – Early Child Development and Care, 2006
This study examined a wide range of literature in order to describe factors associated with the concept of infant health. The design of the study is a literature review examining 21 research studies, written in the English language. The study explored which factors were found to exert an influence on the concept of infant health. The result showed…
Descriptors: Infants, Child Health, Research Reports, Well Being
Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2008
The broad array of data we present each year in the "KIDS COUNT Data Book" is intended to illuminate the status of America's children and to assess trends in their well-being. By updating the assessment every year, KIDS COUNT provides ongoing benchmarks that can be used to see how states have advanced or regressed over time. Readers can…
Descriptors: Profiles, Well Being, Juvenile Justice, Social Action
McCoy-Thompson, M.; And Others – 1994
This volume describes the experiences of each of the 15 rural and urban Healthy Start initiatives. These projects were set up in areas that had infant mortality rates that were 1.5 to 2.5 times the national average. Project locations include major cities such as Chicago, Illinois; Boston, Massachusetts; and Oakland, California, and rural areas in…
Descriptors: Child Health, Community Involvement, Family Programs, Infant Mortality
Huraux-Rendu, Christine; And Others – Children in the Tropics, 1991
This issue of Children in the Tropics analyzes key issues relating to protecting the health of newborn infants. Many of the suggestions offered concern rudimentary health care situations in developing countries. Key issues are addressed in four sections. The first section discusses the early care and first medical examination of infants born in…
Descriptors: Birth, Breastfeeding, Child Health, Communicable Diseases
National Inst. of Child Health and Human Development (NIH), Bethesda, MD. – 1990
Collected in this document are reports of the National Institutes of Health's 1989 accomplishments in research on the problem of infant mortality. Reports are provided by the: (1) National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; (2) National Cancer Institute; (3) National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; (4) National Institute of…
Descriptors: Child Health, Diseases, Federal Government, Federal Programs
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