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Trends and Socioeconomic Gradients in Adult Mortality Around the Developing World 1991-2009

World, 1991 - 2009
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Reference ID
WLD_2011_TSGAM_v01_M
Producer(s)
Damien de Walque and Deon Filmer
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Created on
Dec 05, 2019
Last modified
Dec 05, 2019
Page views
25548
  • Study Description
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  • Version
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  • Identification

    Survey ID number

    WLD_2011_TSGAM_v01_M

    Title

    Trends and Socioeconomic Gradients in Adult Mortality Around the Developing World 1991-2009

    Country
    Name Country code
    World WLD
    Abstract

    The authors combine data from 84 Demographic and Health Surveys from 46 countries to analyze trends and socioeconomic differences in adult mortality, calculating mortality based on the sibling mortality reports collected from female respondents aged 15-49.

    The analysis yields four main findings. First, adult mortality is different from child mortality: while under-5 mortality shows a definite improving trend over time, adult mortality does not, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. The second main finding is the increase in adult mortality in Sub-Saharan African countries. The increase is dramatic among those most affected by the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Mortality rates in the highest HIV-prevalence countries of southern Africa exceed those in countries that experienced episodes of civil war. Third, even in Sub-Saharan countries where HIV-prevalence is not as high, mortality rates appear to be at best stagnating, and even increasing in several cases. Finally, the main socioeconomic dimension along which mortality appears to differ in the aggregate is gender. Adult mortality rates in Sub-Saharan Africa have risen substantially higher for men than for women?especially so in the high HIV-prevalence countries. On the whole, the data do not show large gaps by urban/rural residence or by school attainment.

    This paper is a product of the Human Development and Public Services Team, Development Research Group. It is part of a larger effort by the World Bank to provide open access to its research and make a contribution to development policy discussions around the world. Policy Research Working Papers are also posted on the Web at http://econ.worldbank.org.

    Kind of Data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Unit of Analysis

    Country

    Version

    Version Date

    2011-06

    Scope

    Keywords
    Demographics Health Monitoring and Evaluation Population Policies Early Child and Children's Health

    Coverage

    Geographic Coverage

    We derive estimates of adult mortality from an analysis of Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data from 46 countries, 33 of which are from Sub-Saharan Africa and 13 of which are from countries in other regions (Annex Table). Several of the countries have been surveyed more than once and we base our estimates on the total of 84 surveys that have been carried out (59 in Sub-Saharan Africa, 25 elsewhere).

    The countries covered by DHS in Sub-Saharan Africa represent almost 90 percent of the region's population. Outside of Sub-Saharan Africa the DHS surveys we use cover a far smaller share of the population-even if this is restricted to countries whose GDP per capita never exceeds $10,000: overall about 14 percent of the population is covered by these countries, although this increases to 29 percent if China and India are excluded (countries for which we cannot calculate adult mortality using the DHS). It is therefore important to keep in mind that the sample of non-Sub-Saharan African countries we have cannot be thought of as "representative" of the rest of the world, or even the rest of the developing world.

    Producers and sponsors

    Primary investigators
    Name Affiliation
    Damien de Walque and Deon Filmer World Bank

    Data collection

    Dates of Data Collection
    Start End
    1991 2009
    Data Collection Notes

    The authors combine data from 84 Demographic and Health Surveys from 46 countries.

    Data processing

    Data Editing

    In the course of carrying out this study, the authors created two databases of adult mortality estimates based on the original DHS datasets, both of which are publicly available for analysts who wish to carry out their own analysis of the data.

    The naming conventions for the adult mortality-related are as follows. Variables are named:

    GGG_MC_AAAA

    GGG refers to the population subgroup. The values it can take, and the corresponding definitions are in the following table:

    All - All
    Fem - Female
    Mal - Male
    Rur - Rural
    Urb - Urban
    Rurm - Rural/Male
    Urbm - Urban/Male
    Rurf - Rural/Female
    Urbf - Urban/Female
    Noed - No education
    Pri - Some or completed primary only
    Sec - At least some secondary education
    Noedm - No education/Male
    Prim - Some or completed primary only/Male
    Secm - At least some secondary education/Male
    Noedf - No education/Female
    Prif - Some or completed primary only/Female
    Secf - At least some secondary education/Female
    Rch - Rural as child
    Uch - Urban as child
    Rchm - Rural as child/Male
    Uchm - Urban as child/Male
    Rchf - Rural as child/Female
    Uchf - Urban as child/Female
    Edltp - Less than primary schooling
    Edpom - Primary or more schooling
    Edltpm - Less than primary schooling/Male
    Edpomm - Primary or more schooling/Male
    Edltpf - Less than primary schooling/Female
    Edpomf - Primary or more schooling/Female
    Edltpu - Less than primary schooling/Urban
    Edpomu - Primary or more schooling/Urban
    Edltpr - Less than primary schooling/Rural
    Edpomr - Primary or more schooling/Rural
    Edltpmu - Less than primary schooling/Male/Urban
    Edpommu - Primary or more schooling/Male/Urban
    Edltpmr - Less than primary schooling/Male/Rural
    Edpommr - Primary or more schooling/Male/Rural
    Edltpfu - Less than primary schooling/Female/Urban
    Edpomfu - Primary or more schooling/Female/Urban
    Edltpfr - Less than primary schooling/Female/Rural
    Edpomfr - Primary or more schooling/Female/Rural

    M refers to whether the variable is the number of observations used to calculate the estimate (in which case M takes on the value "n") or whether it is a mortality estimate (in which case M takes on the value "m").

    C refers to whether the variable is for the unadjusted mortality rate calculation (in which case C takes on the value "u") or whether it adjusts for the number of surviving female siblings (in which case C takes on the value "a").

    AAAA refers to the age group that the mortality estimate is calculated for. It takes on the values:
    1554 - Ages 15-54
    1524 - Ages 15-24
    2534 - Ages 25-34
    3544 - Ages 35-44
    4554 - Ages 45-54

    Other variables that are in the databases are:

    period - Period for which mortality rate is calculated (takes on the values 1975-79, 1980-84 … 2000-04)
    svycountry - Name of country for DHS countries
    ccode3 - Country code
    u5mr - Under-5 mortality (from World Development Indicators)
    cname - Country name
    gdppc - GDP per capita (constant 2000 US$) (from World Development Indicators)
    gdppcppp - GDP per capita PPP (constant 2005 intl $) (from World Development Indicators)
    pop - Population (from World Development Indicators)
    hivprev2001 - HIV prevalence in 2001 (from UNAIDS 2010)
    region - Region

    Data Access

    Citation requirements

    "Trends and Socioeconomic Gradients in Adult Mortality Around the Developing World", Damien de Walque and Deon Filmer, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 5716, June 2011. Electronic dataset Ref. WLD_2011_TSGAM_v01_M downloaded from [URL] on [date].

    Disclaimer and copyrights

    Disclaimer

    The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email URL
    Damien de Walque World Bank research@worldbank.org http://go.worldbank.org/XLZAJITUW0
    Deon Filmer World Bank research@worldbank.org http://go.worldbank.org/WJF6HS00D0

    Metadata production

    DDI Document ID

    DDI_WLD_2011_TSGAM_v01_M_v01_WBDG

    Date of Metadata Production

    2011-07-21

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