Population Division, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2012;9(8):e1001287. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001287. Epub 2012 Aug 28.
Producing estimates of infant (under age 1 y), child (age 1-4 y), and under-five (under age 5 y) mortality rates disaggregated by sex is complicated by problems with data quality and availability. Interpretation of sex differences requires nuanced analysis: girls have a biological advantage against many causes of death that may be eroded if they are disadvantaged in access to resources. Earlier studies found that girls in some regions were not experiencing the survival advantage expected at given levels of mortality. In this paper I generate new estimates of sex differences for the 1970s to the 2000s.
Simple fitting methods were applied to male-to-female ratios of infant and under-five mortality rates from vital registration, surveys, and censuses. The sex ratio estimates were used to disaggregate published series of both-sexes mortality rates that were based on a larger number of sources. In many developing countries, I found that sex ratios of mortality have changed in the same direction as historically occurred in developed countries, but typically had a lower degree of female advantage for a given level of mortality. Regional average sex ratios weighted by numbers of births were found to be highly influenced by China and India, the only countries where both infant mortality and overall under-five mortality were estimated to be higher for girls than for boys in the 2000s. For the less developed regions (comprising Africa, Asia excluding Japan, Latin America/Caribbean, and Oceania excluding Australia and New Zealand), on average, boys' under-five mortality in the 2000s was about 2% higher than girls'. A number of countries were found to still experience higher mortality for girls than boys in the 1-4-y age group, with concentrations in southern Asia, northern Africa/western Asia, and western Africa. In the more developed regions (comprising Europe, northern America, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand), I found that the sex ratio of infant mortality peaked in the 1970s or 1980s and declined thereafter.
The methods developed here pinpoint regions and countries where sex differences in mortality merit closer examination to ensure that both sexes are sharing equally in access to health resources. Further study of the distribution of causes of death in different settings will aid the interpretation of differences in survival for boys and girls. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary.
按性别细分婴儿(不满 1 岁)、儿童(1-4 岁)和五岁以下儿童(不满 5 岁)死亡率估计值的工作十分复杂,这是因为数据质量和可用性存在问题。对性别差异的解释需要细致的分析:女孩在许多死因方面具有生物学优势,但如果她们在获得资源方面处于劣势,这种优势可能会被削弱。早期的研究发现,在一些地区,女孩并没有像预期的那样在死亡率水平下获得生存优势。本文旨在生成 20 世纪 70 年代至 2000 年代新的性别差异估计值。
我使用简单的拟合方法,根据生命登记、调查和人口普查数据,计算婴儿和五岁以下儿童死亡率的男女比例。使用性别比例估计值来细分基于更多来源的男女混合死亡率系列。在许多发展中国家,我发现死亡率的性别比例变化与发达国家历史上的变化方向相同,但在死亡率水平相同的情况下,女性的优势通常较低。按出生人数加权的区域平均性别比例受到中国和印度的高度影响,这两个国家是 2000 年代女孩的婴儿死亡率和整体五岁以下儿童死亡率均高于男孩的仅有的两个国家。在欠发达地区(包括非洲、亚洲(日本除外)、拉丁美洲/加勒比地区和大洋洲(澳大利亚和新西兰除外)),2000 年代男孩的五岁以下儿童死亡率平均比女孩高 2%左右。发现一些国家 1-4 岁儿童组的女孩死亡率仍高于男孩,主要集中在南亚、北非/西亚和西非。在较发达地区(包括欧洲、北美洲、日本、澳大利亚和新西兰),我发现婴儿死亡率的性别比例在 20 世纪 70 年代或 80 年代达到峰值,此后有所下降。
本文开发的方法可以确定需要更仔细检查死亡率性别差异的地区和国家,以确保男女平等享有获得卫生资源的机会。进一步研究不同环境下死亡原因的分布将有助于解释男孩和女孩生存差异的原因。请在文章后面查看编辑摘要。