๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ Infant Mortality Rate of Switzerland

3.17
Infant Mortality Rate
263
Infant Deaths
75,143
Overall Deaths

The current infant mortality rate of Switzerland is 3.1727 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births. A -0.11% decrease from 2023, when the infant mortality rate was 3.1763 and 265 infants died for the year. In the future, Switzerland's infant mortality rate is projected to decrease to 0.6019 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births, by the year 2100. A total decrease of Switzerland's infant mortality rate by -81.03% 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 3.1727 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births, a decrease of -89.77% in total.

Year Infant Mortality Rate (infant deaths for every 1,000 live births) Infant Deaths Overall Deaths
1950 31.0258 2,621 47,306
1951 29.2735 2,408 49,899
1952 29.0801 2,416 47,598
1953 28.9768 2,410 49,627
1954 26.7645 2,240 49,069
1955 25.9935 2,217 50,247
1956 25.4081 2,232 51,513
1957 22.7248 2,059 50,988
1958 21.7646 1,992 49,147
1959 21.8691 2,029 49,998
1960 21.1869 1,993 52,030
1961 21.517 2,099 50,882
1962 21.7155 2,229 54,980
1963 20.9127 2,260 56,947
1964 19.4234 2,167 53,516
1965 17.7001 1,973 55,427
1966 16.9596 1,855 55,669
1967 17.4878 1,866 54,982
1968 16.1382 1,684 57,246
1969 15.5921 1,589 57,869
1970 15.34 1,528 57,026
1971 14.2175 1,365 57,772
1972 13.0294 1,191 56,404
1973 13.1034 1,146 56,934
1974 12.5356 1,056 56,368
1975 10.6101 841 55,978
1976 10.8168 808 57,231
1977 9.7921 712 55,689
1978 8.579 613 57,826
1979 8.593 615 57,518
1980 9.2105 671 59,134
1981 7.5375 553 59,863
1982 7.6869 570 59,249
1983 7.4782 551 60,912
1984 7.2044 534 58,646
1985 6.8866 512 59,676
1986 6.9356 523 60,280
1987 6.9077 525 59,716
1988 7.0172 555 60,802
1989 7.3852 595 61,014
1990 6.946 571 63,955
1991 6.3475 532 62,783
1992 6.4344 553 62,495
1993 5.4806 458 62,754
1994 5.1586 425 62,244
1995 5.0629 414 63,600
1996 4.7326 390 62,970
1997 4.7271 381 63,092
1998 4.7591 375 62,833
1999 4.6142 360 62,856
2000 4.9332 382 62,722
2001 4.8496 352 61,478
2002 4.5365 324 61,918
2003 4.2845 305 63,366
2004 4.3091 311 60,441
2005 4.2443 307 61,387
2006 4.4307 322 60,598
2007 4.0084 294 61,444
2008 4.0539 305 61,489
2009 4.3801 338 62,879
2010 3.9046 309 62,925
2011 3.8512 306 62,312
2012 3.7886 306 64,348
2013 3.9503 322 65,477
2014 4.0505 339 64,132
2015 4.004 341 67,991
2016 3.5585 308 65,188
2017 3.5951 311 67,304
2018 3.3245 288 67,599
2019 3.298 282 68,100
2020 3.6915 314 76,427
2021 3.2394 287 71,444
2022 3.3059 274 76,534
2023 3.1763 265 73,788
2024 3.1727 263 75,143

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 3.1727 to an average of 0.6019 infant deaths for every 1,000 live births. An additional decrease of -81.03% from 2024 to 2100.

Year Infant Mortality Rate (infant deaths for every 1,000 live births) Infant Deaths Overall Deaths
2024 3.1727 263 75,143
2025 3.1 255 76,041
2026 3.0304 245 76,989
2027 2.9615 236 77,960
2028 2.8981 227 79,031
2029 2.8363 219 80,144
2030 2.7723 211 81,230
2031 2.7135 204 82,413
2032 2.656 198 83,621
2033 2.6053 193 84,945
2034 2.5557 189 86,273
2035 2.502 185 87,494
2036 2.4517 182 88,753
2037 2.4005 180 89,941
2038 2.351 177 91,124
2039 2.3068 175 92,388
2040 2.2609 173 93,584
2041 2.217 171 94,805
2042 2.1732 169 96,017
2043 2.1303 168 97,262
2044 2.0893 166 98,573
2045 2.0446 164 99,813
2046 2.0045 161 101,222
2047 1.9662 159 102,716
2048 1.9244 156 104,132
2049 1.889 154 105,761
2050 1.8492 151 107,222
2051 1.8122 148 108,741
2052 1.7741 145 110,146
2053 1.7368 141 111,479
2054 1.7023 138 112,756
2055 1.6685 134 113,881
2056 1.6365 131 114,866
2057 1.6043 128 115,604
2058 1.57 124 116,026
2059 1.5374 121 116,287
2060 1.509 118 116,475
2061 1.4795 115 116,413
2062 1.4482 112 116,087
2063 1.4184 109 115,691
2064 1.3909 106 115,278
2065 1.3617 104 114,729
2066 1.3338 102 114,222
2067 1.3044 99 113,658
2068 1.2809 98 113,386
2069 1.2528 96 112,978
2070 1.2274 94 112,769
2071 1.2014 92 112,576
2072 1.1771 91 112,536
2073 1.1498 89 112,368
2074 1.1267 88 112,430
2075 1.1006 86 112,315
2076 1.0768 85 112,277
2077 1.0537 83 112,186
2078 1.0295 82 111,934
2079 1.0059 80 111,588
2080 0.9844 79 111,212
2081 0.962 77 110,620
2082 0.9402 75 109,900
2083 0.9189 73 109,049
2084 0.8981 72 108,073
2085 0.8757 70 106,881
2086 0.8547 68 105,624
2087 0.8356 67 104,366
2088 0.8127 65 102,828
2089 0.7946 63 101,526
2090 0.7769 61 100,247
2091 0.7557 59 98,810
2092 0.737 58 97,593
2093 0.7189 56 96,580
2094 0.7004 54 95,689
2095 0.6841 53 95,100
2096 0.6657 51 94,585
2097 0.6503 50 94,446
2098 0.6329 49 94,366
2099 0.6152 47 94,429
2100 0.6019 46 94,941

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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