Life expectancy and infant mortality in Latin America
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The relationship between early-life conditions in the home country and adult outcomes among child immigrants in the United States
2022, Economics and Human BiologyCitation Excerpt :Socioeconomic development due to increases in GDP can also explain IMR declines while democratic countries benefit more from such economic improvements (Shandra et al., 2004). Cleland et al. (1992) finds that increases in maternal education and father’s socioeconomic conditions can explain most of the decline in IMR among developing countries from 1970s to 1980s Bähr and Wehrhahn (1993) report that the development of primary and secondary health care is the most important factor behind the reduction in IMR in Latin America while improvements of sanitary conditions have been proven to be very efficient in the fight against infant mortality. Similar findings are reported by Sandiford et al. (1991) for Nicaragua where improved access to health services appears to be the most important factor that can explain dramatic declines in infant mortality in 1970s
Potential versus revealed access to care during a dengue fever outbreak
2017, Journal of Transport and HealthCitation Excerpt :In developing countries, access to health care is uneven (Fosu, 1989; Delmelle and Casas, 2012) as the planning of the distribution of health services often does not consider socio-medical priorities or how services are used (Fosu, 1989). This makes measuring access to health care in the developing world difficult (Bahr and Wehrhahn, 1993), not only due to the populations’ characteristics (remoteness and lack of infrastructure to reach rural communities), but also the costs involved in the process. However, countries in Latin America, for example, have made substantial and consistent investments in research for health (Council on Healh Research for Development, 2006).
Impact of sanitation, safe drinking water and health expenditure on infant mortality rate in developing economies
2020, Australian Economic PapersInfant mortality in the Metropolitan Region, Chile 2005-2014
2020, Revista Chilena de Pediatria