Evidence drawn from nineteenth-century Belgian population registers shows that the presence of similarly aged siblings competing for resources within a household increases the probability of death for children younger than five, even when controlling for the preceding birth interval and multiple births. Furthermore, in this period of Belgian history, such mortality tended to cluster in certain families. The findings suggest the importance of segmenting the mortality of siblings younger than five by age group, of considering the presence of siblings as a time-varying covariate, and of factoring mortality clustering into analyses
Demographic research has paid much attention to the impact of childhood conditions on adult mortalit...
Background The number and rank order of siblings could be of importance for risk of cardiovascular d...
How do early-life conditions affect adult mortality? Research has yielded mixed evidence about the i...
BACKGROUND Family composition and household dynamics, both in early and in later life, influence ind...
During the last two decades, scholars found infant mortality to be clustered within families, both f...
In the recent literature on young age mortality a considerable attention has been devoted to the phe...
In this article, we investigate to what degree infant mortality risk was transferred from grandmothe...
This paper shows that death clustering, the unequal distribution of young age mortality between fami...
Contains fulltext : 178093pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)32 p
Given the intrinsically sequential nature of childbirth, timing of a child's birth has consequences ...
There is a considerable body of research on the effects of siblings on child mortality through birth...
The burden of infant mortality is not shared equally by all families, but clusters in high risk fami...
Rivalry, solidarity, and longevity among siblings: A life course approach to the impact of sibship c...
A negative association between interval length and infant and child mortality has been consistently ...
Using multigenerational population register data that cover the total Swed-ish population, we studie...
Demographic research has paid much attention to the impact of childhood conditions on adult mortalit...
Background The number and rank order of siblings could be of importance for risk of cardiovascular d...
How do early-life conditions affect adult mortality? Research has yielded mixed evidence about the i...
BACKGROUND Family composition and household dynamics, both in early and in later life, influence ind...
During the last two decades, scholars found infant mortality to be clustered within families, both f...
In the recent literature on young age mortality a considerable attention has been devoted to the phe...
In this article, we investigate to what degree infant mortality risk was transferred from grandmothe...
This paper shows that death clustering, the unequal distribution of young age mortality between fami...
Contains fulltext : 178093pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)32 p
Given the intrinsically sequential nature of childbirth, timing of a child's birth has consequences ...
There is a considerable body of research on the effects of siblings on child mortality through birth...
The burden of infant mortality is not shared equally by all families, but clusters in high risk fami...
Rivalry, solidarity, and longevity among siblings: A life course approach to the impact of sibship c...
A negative association between interval length and infant and child mortality has been consistently ...
Using multigenerational population register data that cover the total Swed-ish population, we studie...
Demographic research has paid much attention to the impact of childhood conditions on adult mortalit...
Background The number and rank order of siblings could be of importance for risk of cardiovascular d...
How do early-life conditions affect adult mortality? Research has yielded mixed evidence about the i...