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Infant and child mortality in the Netherlands 1935-47 and changes related to the Dutch famine of 1944-45: A population-based analysis.

Authors
  • de Zwarte, Ingrid J J1
  • Ekamper, Peter2, 3
  • Lumey, L H4, 5
  • 1 Wageningen University & Research.
  • 2 Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute. , (Netherlands)
  • 3 University of Groningen.
  • 4 Columbia University.
  • 5 Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study. , (Netherlands)
Type
Published Article
Journal
Population studies
Publication Date
Nov 01, 2024
Volume
78
Issue
3
Pages
483–501
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1080/00324728.2023.2243913
PMID: 37698237
Source
Medline
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

Precise estimates of the impact of famine on infant and child mortality are rare due to lack of representative data. Using vital statistics reports on the Netherlands for 1935-47, we examine the impact of the Dutch famine (November 1944 to May 1945) on age-specific mortality risk and cause of death in four age groups (stillbirths, <1 year, 1-4, 5-14) in the three largest famine-affected cities and the remainder of the country. Mortality during the famine is compared with the pre-war period January 1935 to April 1940, the war period May 1940 to October 1944, and the post-war period June 1945 to December 1947. The famine's impact was most visible in infants because of the combined effects of a high absolute death rate and a threefold increase in proportional mortality, mostly from gastrointestinal conditions. These factors make infant mortality the most sensitive indicator of famine severity in this setting and a candidate marker for comparative use in future studies.

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