๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ Infant Mortality Rate of Switzerland

2.96
Infant Mortality Rate
254
Infant Deaths
71,601
Overall Deaths

The current infant mortality rate of Switzerland is 2.9649 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births. A -2.26% decrease from 2023, when the infant mortality rate was 3.0335 and 262 infants died for the year. In the future, Switzerland's infant mortality rate is projected to decrease to 0.488 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births, by the year 2100. A total decrease of Switzerland's infant mortality rate by -83.54% from today's standard. This positive trend of Switzerland'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 Switzerland (1950-2024)

Switzerland has seen a decrease of the infant mortality rate since the 1950's. From 31.0258 to 2.9649 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births, a decrease of -90.44% in total.

Year Infant Mortality Rate (infant deaths for every 1,000 live births) Infant Deaths Overall Deaths
1950 31.0258 2,618 47,303
1951 29.2735 2,403 49,891
1952 29.08 2,406 47,586
1953 28.9768 2,408 49,620
1954 26.7644 2,233 49,071
1955 25.9934 2,209 50,266
1956 25.408 2,225 51,537
1957 22.7247 2,055 51,015
1958 21.7646 1,988 49,201
1959 21.869 2,025 50,048
1960 21.1869 1,995 52,093
1961 21.5171 2,102 50,947
1962 21.7155 2,228 55,060
1963 20.9127 2,260 57,010
1964 19.4233 2,163 53,577
1965 17.7 1,970 55,500
1966 16.9596 1,852 55,746
1967 17.4878 1,866 55,057
1968 16.1382 1,685 57,323
1969 15.5921 1,589 57,933
1970 15.34 1,528 57,071
1971 14.2176 1,369 57,794
1972 13.0294 1,196 56,417
1973 13.1034 1,147 56,931
1974 12.5356 1,057 56,350
1975 10.6101 842 55,947
1976 10.8168 810 57,181
1977 9.7921 714 55,631
1978 8.579 613 57,762
1979 8.593 616 57,460
1980 9.2106 672 59,070
1981 7.5375 553 59,754
1982 7.6869 570 59,153
1983 7.4782 551 60,797
1984 7.2044 535 58,539
1985 6.8866 512 59,536
1986 6.9356 524 60,114
1987 6.9077 526 59,549
1988 7.0172 556 60,629
1989 7.3852 595 60,835
1990 6.946 570 63,756
1991 6.3475 532 62,611
1992 6.4344 553 62,297
1993 5.4806 458 62,529
1994 5.1586 425 62,041
1995 5.0629 414 63,386
1996 4.7326 390 62,741
1997 4.7271 381 62,875
1998 4.7591 376 62,596
1999 4.6142 360 62,637
2000 4.9332 383 62,523
2001 4.8496 352 61,256
2002 4.5365 325 61,706
2003 4.2845 306 63,090
2004 4.3091 311 60,168
2005 4.2443 308 61,062
2006 4.4307 322 60,250
2007 4.0084 295 61,123
2008 4.054 305 61,184
2009 4.3801 338 62,568
2010 3.9046 309 62,650
2011 3.8512 307 61,992
2012 3.7886 306 64,007
2013 3.9503 322 65,069
2014 4.0505 340 63,794
2015 4.004 342 67,634
2016 3.5585 308 64,852
2017 3.5951 312 66,996
2018 3.3245 289 67,281
2019 3.298 284 67,786
2020 3.6915 319 75,992
2021 3.2185 279 69,734
2022 3.0974 268 69,565
2023 3.0335 262 70,610
2024 2.9649 254 71,601

Future Infant Mortality Rate of Switzerland (2024-2100)

Switzerland'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 2.9649 to an average of 0.488 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births. An additional decrease of -83.54% from 2024 to 2100.

Year Infant Mortality Rate (infant deaths for every 1,000 live births) Infant Deaths Overall Deaths
2024 2.9649 254 71,601
2025 2.9009 247 72,670
2026 2.842 241 73,834
2027 2.7782 234 74,941
2028 2.7217 227 76,182
2029 2.6613 220 77,378
2030 2.6133 214 78,801
2031 2.5581 208 80,103
2032 2.5042 202 81,431
2033 2.4539 197 82,819
2034 2.4028 193 84,175
2035 2.3548 189 85,562
2036 2.3083 185 86,941
2037 2.2602 183 88,237
2038 2.2113 179 89,458
2039 2.1659 176 90,716
2040 2.1216 174 91,958
2041 2.0798 172 93,233
2042 2.0396 169 94,537
2043 1.9997 167 95,842
2044 1.957 165 97,092
2045 1.9153 162 98,401
2046 1.8733 159 99,741
2047 1.8369 157 101,289
2048 1.8 154 102,855
2049 1.7621 152 104,403
2050 1.7219 149 105,878
2051 1.6888 145 107,566
2052 1.6571 143 109,240
2053 1.6224 140 110,707
2054 1.5886 137 112,066
2055 1.5529 134 113,177
2056 1.5206 131 114,229
2057 1.4865 128 114,986
2058 1.4558 125 115,642
2059 1.4233 122 115,995
2060 1.3941 119 116,253
2061 1.3631 116 116,235
2062 1.333 113 116,068
2063 1.3028 111 115,771
2064 1.274 108 115,429
2065 1.244 105 114,966
2066 1.2167 103 114,632
2067 1.1901 101 114,353
2068 1.1615 98 114,050
2069 1.1362 96 113,986
2070 1.1115 94 114,043
2071 1.0832 92 114,009
2072 1.0581 90 114,221
2073 1.0312 88 114,417
2074 1.0091 87 114,895
2075 0.9836 85 115,206
2076 0.9602 83 115,630
2077 0.9383 82 116,057
2078 0.9133 80 116,239
2079 0.8939 79 116,644
2080 0.8702 77 116,665
2081 0.8452 75 116,485
2082 0.8261 73 116,513
2083 0.8013 72 116,037
2084 0.7803 70 115,658
2085 0.7599 68 115,171
2086 0.739 66 114,503
2087 0.719 64 113,815
2088 0.6994 62 113,008
2089 0.6786 60 112,060
2090 0.661 59 111,275
2091 0.6422 57 110,354
2092 0.6233 55 109,476
2093 0.605 53 108,689
2094 0.5871 52 107,977
2095 0.5699 50 107,446
2096 0.5533 49 107,065
2097 0.5371 47 106,796
2098 0.5202 46 106,621
2099 0.5038 45 106,563
2100 0.488 43 106,648

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 2022.

Data Sources

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

UN Revision of World Population Prospects 2022

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