๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ช Infant Mortality Rate of Sweden

1.85
Infant Mortality Rate
180
Infant Deaths
95,768
Overall Deaths

The current infant mortality rate of Sweden is 1.8473 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births. A -0.73% decrease from 2023, when the infant mortality rate was 1.8608 and 184 infants died for the year. In the future, Sweden's infant mortality rate is projected to decrease to 0.3158 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births, by the year 2100. A total decrease of Sweden's infant mortality rate by -82.9% from today's standard. This positive trend of Sweden's infant mortality rate can broadly be attributed to improvements in hygiene, water quality, and living conditions that reduced the spread of infections. The avalibality of midwife-led continuity of care (MLCC) from professional midwives according to international standard also plays a role in the overall decrease of the infant mortality rate.

Historic Infant Mortality Rate of Sweden (1950-2024)

Sweden has seen a decrease of the infant mortality rate since the 1950's. From 20.4206 to 1.8473 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births, a decrease of -90.95% in total.

Year Infant Mortality Rate (infant deaths for every 1,000 live births) Infant Deaths Overall Deaths
1950 20.4206 2,367 70,184
1951 21.0398 2,335 69,794
1952 20.1171 2,219 68,305
1953 18.611 2,047 69,539
1954 18.1958 1,921 68,968
1955 17.6304 1,879 68,690
1956 17.3318 1,867 70,174
1957 17.6305 1,885 73,024
1958 15.7355 1,655 71,035
1959 16.4714 1,708 70,807
1960 16.4035 1,662 75,090
1961 15.904 1,638 73,499
1962 15.5709 1,651 76,779
1963 15.7497 1,753 76,512
1964 14.8042 1,773 76,639
1965 13.2031 1,607 78,111
1966 12.6511 1,552 78,390
1967 12.601 1,529 79,729
1968 12.6978 1,447 82,443
1969 11.5208 1,242 83,299
1970 11.2849 1,233 79,999
1971 11.3516 1,289 82,665
1972 10.7339 1,207 83,999
1973 9.6652 1,065 85,564
1974 9.5349 1,043 86,314
1975 8.302 865 88,156
1976 8.0996 801 90,679
1977 7.9024 758 88,169
1978 7.6573 717 89,593
1979 7.5661 722 91,044
1980 6.8896 665 91,771
1981 6.826 644 92,011
1982 6.7593 627 90,707
1983 6.9681 641 90,734
1984 6.4543 604 90,410
1985 6.883 671 94,052
1986 6.008 607 93,278
1987 6.1918 645 93,276
1988 5.9921 662 96,579
1989 5.8636 675 92,032
1990 6.1014 744 95,102
1991 6.0863 751 95,138
1992 5.2934 647 94,689
1993 4.746 560 96,868
1994 4.3387 487 91,663
1995 3.9803 416 93,929
1996 3.8229 369 94,028
1997 3.5266 322 93,277
1998 3.5293 315 93,360
1999 3.3352 295 94,770
2000 3.4521 310 93,406
2001 3.6296 331 93,819
2002 3.3373 317 95,053
2003 3.1517 310 92,882
2004 3.1121 312 90,607
2005 2.4275 246 91,953
2006 2.8399 297 91,192
2007 2.505 267 91,754
2008 2.4901 270 91,449
2009 2.5121 278 90,186
2010 2.5537 291 90,681
2011 2.0648 231 89,935
2012 2.5923 291 91,892
2013 2.6742 302 90,334
2014 2.1822 248 88,945
2015 2.4312 278 90,973
2016 2.4679 286 90,979
2017 2.3517 271 91,926
2018 2.0118 231 92,256
2019 2.0313 232 88,778
2020 2.3341 264 98,379
2021 1.8473 209 91,914
2022 2.0685 220 94,672
2023 1.8608 184 93,944
2024 1.8473 180 95,768

Future Infant Mortality Rate of Sweden (2024-2100)

Sweden's positive downward trend in the infant mortality rate is set to decrease even further in the future. Where the infant mortality rate will shrink from 1.8473 to an average of 0.3158 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births. An additional decrease of -82.9% from 2024 to 2100.

Year Infant Mortality Rate (infant deaths for every 1,000 live births) Infant Deaths Overall Deaths
2024 1.8473 180 95,768
2025 1.7888 174 96,653
2026 1.7326 167 97,652
2027 1.682 161 98,835
2028 1.6351 156 100,150
2029 1.5882 150 101,482
2030 1.547 146 102,975
2031 1.5057 142 104,432
2032 1.4655 139 105,863
2033 1.429 136 107,323
2034 1.392 134 108,639
2035 1.3561 132 109,846
2036 1.3214 130 110,916
2037 1.2896 129 111,891
2038 1.2539 127 112,505
2039 1.2261 126 113,229
2040 1.1956 124 113,651
2041 1.1636 122 113,838
2042 1.1368 121 114,121
2043 1.1082 118 114,228
2044 1.0859 116 114,571
2045 1.0616 114 114,802
2046 1.0382 111 115,078
2047 1.0128 108 115,296
2048 0.9883 105 115,606
2049 0.9657 102 116,077
2050 0.9465 99 116,786
2051 0.9274 96 117,577
2052 0.9065 93 118,283
2053 0.8888 90 119,181
2054 0.8671 87 119,835
2055 0.8481 84 120,609
2056 0.8298 81 121,347
2057 0.8124 79 122,053
2058 0.795 76 122,653
2059 0.7763 74 123,044
2060 0.761 72 123,530
2061 0.7445 70 123,798
2062 0.7289 69 124,021
2063 0.7143 67 124,185
2064 0.6982 66 124,145
2065 0.6835 65 124,148
2066 0.6693 64 124,142
2067 0.6558 63 124,204
2068 0.6416 62 124,196
2069 0.6264 61 124,157
2070 0.6139 60 124,392
2071 0.5989 59 124,468
2072 0.5863 58 124,836
2073 0.5729 57 125,207
2074 0.5624 56 125,941
2075 0.5498 55 126,515
2076 0.5384 54 127,284
2077 0.5262 53 128,000
2078 0.5157 52 128,842
2079 0.5043 50 129,561
2080 0.4944 49 130,357
2081 0.4846 48 130,991
2082 0.4733 47 131,254
2083 0.464 46 131,530
2084 0.4532 44 131,370
2085 0.4443 43 131,172
2086 0.4345 42 130,517
2087 0.4236 41 129,541
2088 0.4142 40 128,556
2089 0.405 39 127,490
2090 0.3957 37 126,374
2091 0.3876 37 125,458
2092 0.38 36 124,738
2093 0.3718 35 124,133
2094 0.3628 34 123,705
2095 0.3551 33 123,734
2096 0.3467 33 123,967
2097 0.3388 32 124,555
2098 0.3316 31 125,488
2099 0.3225 30 126,268
2100 0.3158 30 127,517

What is Infant Mortality Rate?

Mortality rate is a measure of the frequency of occurrence of death in a defined population during a specified interval. Infant mortality rate refers to the number of deaths of infants under one year of age per 1,000 live births in a given population. It is an important indicator of the overall health and well-being of a society, as well as the quality of healthcare and socio-economic conditions.

How is Infant Mortality Rate calculated?

The infant mortality rate or IMR for short is the number of children that die under one year of age in a given year, per 1,000 live births. Thus, infant mortality rates are calculated as the number of deaths in the first year of life divided by the number of live births, multiplied by 1000.

Infant Mortality Rate Formula

Infant Mortality Rate = deaths under 1 year / live births * 1000

What Countries have the Lowest Infant Mortality Rate?

In general, developed countries tend to have lower infant mortality rates due to better access to healthcare, advanced medical facilities, and public health initiatives. In contrast, developing countries often have higher rates due to various factors such as limited access to healthcare, inadequate nutrition, poor sanitation, and infectious diseases.

Infant Mortality Rate numbers for country change each year, thus we provide a list of countries with the lowest infant mortality rate in 2024, and previous years dating back to the 1950's.

Data Information

Data found on this page is based on the medium fertility variant of the United Nations Revision of World Population Prospects 2024.

Data Published: 2024-07-11

Data Sources

The United Nations - Department of Economic and Social Affairs (Population Division)

UN Revision of World Population Prospects 2024

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