# Projecting the future of early life mortality in the developing world

> **NIH NIH K01** · UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN · 2022 · $132,186

## Abstract

Project Summary
In 1960, 12% of babies worldwide died in their first year of life; this fell to only 3% in 2015. How will infant
mortality in the developing world continue to change, as environmental and nutritional factors change?
Puzzles remain about today’s heterogeneity in neonatal mortality (NNM), even as changing environmental
exposures (such as to heat and humidity) and trends in maternal nutrition portend changes in future global
patterns of neonatal death. Policy-making and public health depend on accurate projections of NNM under
alternative scenarios. This five-year project will position me to pursue a new research agenda in the
population science of NNM in the developing world and to project its future in changing environmental and
nutritional contexts.
My mentorship will be led by Mentor Joe Potter of the UT PRC (who will teach demographic coursework at
UT), with co-Mentor Michel Guillot of the Penn PSC: both are experts on early-life mortality in developing
countries. First (Aim 1), during and as a foundational part of training, I will examine demographic literature on
neonatal death in developing countries, using new data from surveys and co-Mentor’s related R01 on age of
child death. Co-Mentor Michel Guillot’s NICHD-funded project is assembling data on exact age of death. Age
at death is informative about the causes of NNM in Aims 2 and 3. Then (Aim 2), I will project consequences of
future weather changes for neonatal death, fertility, and population dynamics; to do this, I will first estimate
causal effects of changing weather patterns in the developing world on NNM. As part of this Aim and at the
heart of this project, I will use demographic methods to project effects of future weather changes. Critically, in
the last step of Aim 2, I will use these results (and new training in cohort-level demographic projections from
Aim 1) to improve the demographic sub-modules of leading climate-economy models for policy-making; the
National Academy of Science recently highlighted such modules as a key research gap in policy-making for
environmental public health. Finally (Aim 3), I will project consequences for NNM of changing patterns of
maternal nutrition and family size, applying new estimates of the causal effect.
Although my training in economics at Princeton University and experience studying child health while living in
India are valuable foundations for this research, fulfilling these goals would not be possible without career
development in the methods, theories, and insights of demography – which has not yet been part of my
training. These Aims will prepare me to then pursue R01 support as an independent population scientist who
will combine economics and demography to inform policy about public health and environmental exposures in
the developing world.

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10473858
- **Project number:** 5K01HD098313-04
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
- **Principal Investigator:** Dean Spears
- **Activity code:** K01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2022
- **Award amount:** $132,186
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2019-09-24 → 2024-08-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10473858

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10473858, Projecting the future of early life mortality in the developing world (5K01HD098313-04). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10473858. Licensed CC0.

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