A child receiving a vaccine in a rural clinic for an article about child mortality rate, for article on child mortality rate

Global child mortality rate drops from 48% to 27% by mid-20th century

For most of human history, roughly one in two children never lived to see their fifth birthday. By 1950 C.E., that number had fallen to roughly one in four — still devastating by any measure, but representing one of the most profound shifts in human welfare ever recorded. It happened through a convergence of science, public policy, sanitation engineering, and accumulated knowledge from healers and communities across every inhabited continent.

What the data shows

  • Child mortality rate: Estimates from historical demography suggest that in pre-modern societies, roughly 40–50% of children died before age five — a rate that held relatively stable for millennia before beginning its decline in the 18th and 19th centuries C.E.
  • Under-five deaths: By 1950 C.E., the global share of children dying before their fifth birthday had fallen to approximately 27%, reflecting decades of compounding gains in medicine, nutrition, and sanitation across many parts of the world.
  • Mortality decline drivers: No single cause explains the drop — improvements in clean water access, the germ theory of disease, vaccines for smallpox and diphtheria, better maternal care, and rising agricultural productivity all contributed in overlapping and mutually reinforcing ways.

Centuries of groundwork

The 1950 C.E. figure didn’t appear from nowhere. It was the cumulative result of work spanning several centuries and many civilizations.

Edward Jenner’s smallpox vaccine, introduced in 1796 C.E. in England, is often treated as the starting gun for modern preventive medicine. But healers in China and the Ottoman Empire had practiced variolation — deliberately exposing patients to mild smallpox material — at least a century earlier. Knowledge of that technique traveled west through diplomatic and merchant networks before Jenner formalized it. The child mortality decline has always been, in part, a story of cross-cultural knowledge transmission.

Sanitation reform followed a similar pattern. The 19th century C.E. saw major investments in sewer systems and clean water infrastructure across European cities, driven partly by cholera epidemics that struck rich and poor neighborhoods with uncomfortable equality. When engineers in London rebuilt the city’s sewer network after the Great Stink of 1858 C.E., waterborne disease deaths plummeted within a generation. Similar gains came as these ideas spread — unevenly and often slowly — to colonial territories, though the distribution of benefit tracked closely with political power and race.

In the early 20th century C.E., discoveries like expanded vaccine programs, oral rehydration therapy precursors, and the identification of nutritional deficiencies added further layers. The development of antibiotics in the 1940s C.E. arrived just before the 1950 C.E. measurement point, and would accelerate the decline even further in subsequent decades.

What actually saves children

It would be tidy to credit a single intervention. The reality is messier and more instructive.

Economic historians studying the mortality transition have found that clean water access may have been the largest single driver of early child mortality decline in industrialized countries — larger, in those early decades, than medical advances alone. Breastfeeding practices, the timing of weaning, access to diverse foods, and household hygiene knowledge passed between women in communities often did more quiet work than any hospital policy. Indigenous and traditional healing systems in many regions had long understood the importance of hydration in treating diarrheal illness — a leading killer of children — before germ theory gave Western medicine a formal framework for the same insight.

Literacy, particularly women’s literacy, also correlates strongly with child survival across historical datasets. When mothers could read public health guidance, navigate healthcare systems, and advocate for their children, survival rates improved. The causal arrows run in multiple directions, but the pattern is consistent across contexts.

Lasting impact

The decline in child mortality didn’t just mean more children survived. It restructured human society in ways still unfolding today.

Demographers observe that as child mortality falls, birth rates eventually follow — a pattern called the demographic transition. Families that once had six or seven children as a hedge against loss gradually shifted toward having fewer children and investing more in each. This dynamic, documented across Europe, Asia, Latin America, and Africa at different points in the 20th century C.E., fundamentally reshaped economies, education systems, and the physical size of cities.

The 1950 C.E. figure of 27% was also a foundation rather than a ceiling. Global child mortality continued falling through the second half of the 20th century C.E. and into the 21st, reaching below 5% globally by the 2020s C.E. Each percentage point represents millions of lives and millions of families spared grief that previous generations considered the ordinary texture of parenthood.

The gains also created new possibilities for human capital development. Societies where children reliably survive to adulthood can invest in longer-term education and skills development. The correlation between child survival rates and economic productivity is not coincidental — it reflects a virtuous cycle that the mid-20th century C.E. decline helped initiate at scale.

Blindspots and limits

The 27% global figure for 1950 C.E. masks enormous inequality. Child mortality in wealthy industrialized nations had already fallen far below that average by mid-century, while rates in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and colonized territories remained drastically higher — the product of deliberate resource extraction, suppressed local health systems, and decades of denied investment. The aggregate number tells a story of progress; the distribution tells a story of who that progress reached and who it bypassed.

Historical child mortality data also becomes less reliable the further back it reaches. Pre-modern figures are reconstructed from fragmentary burial records, parish registries, and skeletal analyses — credible enough for broad patterns, but not precise enough to support fine-grained comparisons between regions or eras. The “48% historical average” is a well-grounded estimate, not a precisely measured fact.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Our World in Data — Child Mortality

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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