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The ideal entry-level account for individual users. Corporate solution including all features. Statistics on " Infant mortality " The most important statistics. The most important statistics. Further related statistics. Infant mortality rate in Monaco Infant mortality rate in Fiji Number of occupants killed in Alaska road traffic by vehicle type Number of occupants killed in New Jersey road traffic by vehicle type Percentage of U.
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Accessed November 11, Iceland 2. Singapore 2. Bermuda 2. Finland 2. Norway 3. Czech Republic 3. Children living in poorer households continue having a higher chance of dying than in the richest households.
In , under-five mortality rate among the children in the poorest households ranged from 4 per 1, live births to per 1, live births, while those in the richest ranged from 2 to Countries with the highest absolute gap between the richest and the poorest under-five mortality rate in Nigeria 96 , Guinea 69 , Central African Republic Progress in reducing under-five mortality is also uneven by wealth quintile.
In Nigeria, under-five mortality rate in the richest households fell by 50 per cent from to , while the poorest mortality rate declined by 38 per cent. Explore data visualizations of under-five mortality rate estimates by wealth quintile. Despite national progress in reducing under-five mortality, subnational regional progress is uneven. In Nigeria, where the national under-five mortality rate for was deaths per 1, live births, rates at administrative level 1 ranged from a low of 58 deaths per 1, live births to a high of deaths per 1, live births in In Burundi, the national under-five mortality rate has declined by 68 per cent since , while the per cent decline within administrative level 2 divisions ranged from a high of 90 per cent to a low of 31 per cent.
Explore data visualizations of under-five mortality rate estimates by administrative level 1 and 2. Under-five mortality rate: Probability of dying between birth and exactly 5 years of age, expressed per 1, live births. Infant mortality rate: Probability of dying between birth and exactly 1 year of age, expressed per 1, live births. Neonatal mortality rate: Probability of dying during the first 28 days of life, expressed per 1, live births. Probability of dying among children aged 5— Probability of dying at age 5—14 years expressed per 1, children aged 5.
Probability of dying among youth aged 15— Probability of dying at age 15—24 years expressed per 1, youth aged Probability of dying among adolescents aged 10— Probability of dying at age 15—24 years expressed per 1, youth aged If each country had a single source of high-quality data covering the last few decades, reporting on child mortality levels and trends would be straightforward. But few countries do, and the limited availability of high-quality data over time for many countries makes generating accurate estimates of child mortality a considerable challenge.
Nationally representative estimates of child mortality can be derived from several sources, including civil registration, censuses and sample surveys. Demographic surveillance sites and hospital data are excluded because they are rarely nationally representative. The preferred source of data is a civil registration system that records births and deaths on a continuous basis, collects information as events occur and covers the entire population.
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