Infant mortality rate is a health statistic that measures how many babies die before reaching their first birthday, usually expressed as the number of deaths per 1,000 live births in a given year or place.

Simple definition

  • Infant mortality : the death of a baby before age one.
  • Infant mortality rate (IMR) : the number of these deaths per 1,000 live births in a specific year, country, or group.

For example, if a country has an IMR of 5.6, that means about 5.6 babies die before age one for every 1,000 babies born alive that year.

Why it matters

  • IMR is a key indicator of a society’s overall health and development.
  • High infant mortality rates often point to problems with:
    • Access to quality healthcare
    • Nutrition and clean water
    • Sanitation and infection control
    • Maternal health and prenatal care

Public health agencies like WHO, UNICEF, and the CDC closely track IMR to monitor child survival and target interventions.

How it is calculated

Basic idea:

  1. Count all live births in an area in a given year.
  2. Count how many of those babies die before their first birthday.
  3. Divide infant deaths by live births, then multiply by 1,000.

So,

Infant mortality rate=infant deaths (<1 year)live births×1000\text{Infant mortality rate}=\frac{\text{infant deaths (<1 year)}}{\text{live births}}\times 1000Infant mortality rate=live birthsinfant deaths (<1 year)​×1000

This gives a standardized number “per 1,000 live births,” which makes it easier to compare across regions and over time.

Extra context

Health organizations sometimes break IMR into:

  • Neonatal mortality : deaths in the first 28 days of life.
  • Post-neonatal mortality : deaths from 28 days to under 1 year.

IMR is also used alongside under‑five mortality rates to understand broader child survival and social conditions.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.