1. Spanish surname and Anglo infant mortality: differentials over a half-century.
- Author
-
Forbes D and Frisbie WP
- Subjects
- Colitis ethnology, Colitis mortality, Enteritis ethnology, Enteritis mortality, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Mexico ethnology, Texas epidemiology, Infant Mortality, Mexican Americans
- Abstract
Using a half-century of death records from San Antonio/Bexar County, Texas, we examine the timing and cause structure of Spanish surname and Anglo infant mortality. Our findings show that despite the substantial disparities between ethnic-specific infant mortality rates in the early years of the study, there have been consistent declines in overall, neonatal, and postneonatal mortality for both groups, as well as a major convergence of mortality rates between Spanish surname and Anglo infants. Further, we demonstrate that the convergence is of relatively recent origin and is due primarily to shifts in postneonatal mortality. Finally, we examine the transition reflected in the cause structure of ethnic-specific infant mortality and show that the convergence was largely the result of reductions in deaths from exogenous causes. Implications for research into the "epidemiologic paradox" are discussed.
- Published
- 1991