Like Mother, Like Daughter. Intergenerational Transmission of Infant Mortality Clustering in Zeeland,the Netherlands, 1833-1912
2018
textabstractThe burden of infant mortality is not shared equally by all families, but clusters in high risk families. As
yet, it remains unclear why some families experience more infant deaths than other families. Earlier
research has shown that the risk of early death among infants may at least partially be transmitted from
grandmothers to mothers. In this paper, we focus on the intergenerational transmission of mortality
clustering in the Netherlands in the province of Zeeland between 1833 and 1912, using LINKS
Zeeland, a dataset containing family reconstitutions based on civil certificates of birth, marriage and
death. We assess whether intergenerational transmission of mortality clustering occurred in Zeeland,
and if so, whether it can be explained on the basis of the demographic characteristics of the families in
which the infants were born. In addition, we explore the opportunities for comparative research using
the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS). We find that mortality clustering is indeed transmitted from
grandmothers to mothers, and that the socioeconomic status of the family, the survival of mothers
and fathers, and the demographic characteristics of the family affected infant survival. However, they
explain the heterogeneity in infant mortality at the level of the mother only partially.
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