What more boy births could reveal about South Africa’s health status
- Gwinyai Masukume and Victor Grech
There are several ways to find out whether a population’s health is improving or if people in a particular country, city or region are getting sicker.
These measures are known as or indicators.
One example of such an indicator is a country’s – the more women who die during pregnancy, child birth or soon afterwards, the poorer the general population’s health. Take the comparative figures from South Africa and Japan. In 2010 it was estimated that 300 women died for every 100,000 live births. In Japan this number was just five.
South Africa’s maternal mortality rate has remained high, but the years between 2003 and 2014 were generally good for South Africans’ health and the . Life expectancy rose, and the number of children dying at the age of five or younger dropped.
Also during this time, the proportion of boys born in the country increased significantly. Our curiosity was piqued by this fact. So we whether this proportion – sometimes defined as the – might be a sentinel health indicator. We wanted to know whether more boys had been born because of the country’s improving health and/or economic conditions.
More boys
Our research, published in the journal , showed that the proportion of boys born in South Africa went from approximately 50.2% in 2003 to about 50.4% in 2014. This was the last year for which data was available to us. Although this is only a 0.2 percentage point increase, it is significant: consider that on average one million babies are born alive in the country annually. So that 0.2 percentage point increase translates into thousands of “extra” boys born.
The next step was to determine whether the sex ratio at birth could act as a sentinel health indicator for South Africa. has been done . But as far as we know we’re the first researchers to put the sex ratio at birth head-to-head with established sentinel health indicators to see how it performs. These established indicators included life expectancy, the total fertility rate (average number of children a woman has during her life), the infant mortality rate and the under five mortality rate.
For context, from about 54 years in 2003 to 62 years in 2014. And from 51 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2003 to 35 in 2014.
Our statistical analysis found that as the sex ratio at birth went up – that is, more males were born – so did life expectancy in a strongly related manner. In a similar fashion, as the sex ratio at birth went up the infant and under five mortality rates and total fertility rate went down. Simply put, the degree of statistical correlation between the sex ratio at birth and the other sentinel health indicators was strong and highly significant.
This strongly indicates to us that sex ratio at birth in South Africa may be a sentinel health indicator. . However, other evidence from the past decade or so boosts our supposition.
A useful measure
The substantial rise in South African life expectancy and decline in childhood mortality is largely therapy to treat HIV. This process started around 2003. has established that the sex ratio at birth is a strong contender for a sentinel health indicator when it comes to measuring the burden of HIV on a population.
Our findings are also consistent with that more baby boys are born on average when conditions in a society improve, whether this is in terms of its economy, its population’s access to nutrition and a general lowering of .
We believe that the sex ratio at birth may be a useful sentinel health indicator. It could be very valuable in assessing South Africa’s health in future since sex (male or female) at birth is relatively cheap, quick and easy to determine. Of course, researchers would still need to rely on hospital and clinic records for detailed confirmation. An indicator like maternal mortality is more complex: women may not die in hospital and the definition of a maternal death is not necessarily straightforward.
South Africa’s registration of births is ; this tends to be done in a timely fashion and with good detail. Thus, the sex ratio at birth is a good way for researchers to get a simple, quick feel for the country’s health status while waiting for other measures to be calculated.![]()
, Medical Doctor, Epidemiologist and Biostatistician: University College Cork, and , Co-Chair, Humanities, Medicine and Sciences Programme, . This article was originally published on . Read the .