The author considers three methods of counting maternal deaths, and hence of calculating maternal mortality levels, in the nineteenth century. The first method counts maternal deaths classified in contemporary statistical publications. The second method examines nineteenth-century death registers for records of maternal deaths. The third method identifies maternal deaths through family reconstitution. The author finds that each method, in isolation, leads to underestimating maternal mortality levels because maternal deaths were often misregistered or misclassified under nonmaternal causes and were often not associated with live, registered births, as required for family reconstitution
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, most countries in Europe and English-speaking countries o...
In this article, we investigate to what degree infant mortality risk was transferred from grandmothe...
Multiple sources were used to identify maternal deaths and their causes in a study carried out in Ja...
Studies of nineteenth-century cause-specific mortality date from the nineteenth century itself. Of n...
This paper outlines a cause-of-death classification system applicable to nineteenth-century English-...
Using family reconstitution data from the Dutch provinces of Groningen, Drenthe, and Zeeland, trends...
This is the twelfth in a series of triennial reports on maternal deaths dating back to 1964. Under-a...
Accurate measurement of maternal mortality is needed to develop a greater understanding of the scale...
Abstract Methods for measuring maternal mortality at national and subnational levels in the developi...
The paper describes the methods used to create a database to study the fall of fertility in Tasmania...
The paper describes the methods used to create a database to study the fall of fertility in Tasmania...
The paper examines the fall of marital fertility in Tasmania, the second settled Australian colony, ...
About two-thirds of the world's population live in areas where registration of vital statistics is u...
The historical literature on maternal death gives little attention to the problem in Scotland. Data ...
Over the past several decades the efforts to improve maternal survival and the consequent demand for...
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, most countries in Europe and English-speaking countries o...
In this article, we investigate to what degree infant mortality risk was transferred from grandmothe...
Multiple sources were used to identify maternal deaths and their causes in a study carried out in Ja...
Studies of nineteenth-century cause-specific mortality date from the nineteenth century itself. Of n...
This paper outlines a cause-of-death classification system applicable to nineteenth-century English-...
Using family reconstitution data from the Dutch provinces of Groningen, Drenthe, and Zeeland, trends...
This is the twelfth in a series of triennial reports on maternal deaths dating back to 1964. Under-a...
Accurate measurement of maternal mortality is needed to develop a greater understanding of the scale...
Abstract Methods for measuring maternal mortality at national and subnational levels in the developi...
The paper describes the methods used to create a database to study the fall of fertility in Tasmania...
The paper describes the methods used to create a database to study the fall of fertility in Tasmania...
The paper examines the fall of marital fertility in Tasmania, the second settled Australian colony, ...
About two-thirds of the world's population live in areas where registration of vital statistics is u...
The historical literature on maternal death gives little attention to the problem in Scotland. Data ...
Over the past several decades the efforts to improve maternal survival and the consequent demand for...
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, most countries in Europe and English-speaking countries o...
In this article, we investigate to what degree infant mortality risk was transferred from grandmothe...
Multiple sources were used to identify maternal deaths and their causes in a study carried out in Ja...