Abstract

In high-income countries, emerging research suggests sibling bereavement can have significant health and life course consequences for young people. Yet, we know far less about its burden in lower-income countries. Due to higher fertility and mortality in lower-income countries, the level, timing, intensity, and circumstances surrounding sibling mortality are likely to follow patterns distinct from those in higher-income settings. Thus, in this study, we offer a descriptive overview of sibling death in 43 countries across sub-Saharan Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean. Specifically, we analyze Demographic and Health Survey data from nationally representative samples of 352,930 15- to 34-year-old women, born between 1985 and 2003, to document experiences of sibling death before age 25. On average, roughly one-third of individuals report a deceased sibling in these countries; estimates reach 40–50% of respondents in multiple African countries, particularly those that have experienced conflict and war. Although some sibling deaths occurred before the focal respondent was born, most bereaved individuals recalled a death during their lifetime—often in late childhood/early adolescence. High proportions of bereaved respondents report multiple sibling deaths, highlighting the clustering of deaths within families. Even so, bereaved individuals tend to come from large families and thus frequently have a comparable number of surviving siblings as people who never experienced a sibling die. Together, the results offer a window into global inequality in childhood experiences, and they attest to the need for research that explores the implications of sibling mortality for young people in world regions where the experience is concentrated.

Highlights

  • Bereavement is among one of life’s most severe events that can have long-lasting consequences for young people [1, 2]

  • We address the dearth of knowledge on the frequency of, and circumstances surrounding, sibling loss by studying the experiences of a recent cohort of younger women in 43 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean

  • Sibling mortality burden in low-income countries overview of the frequency of, and circumstances surrounding, sibling mortality, this study offers a guidepost for future work interested in identifying the individual and life course implications of sibling death in the world regions where this experience is concentrated

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Summary

Introduction

Bereavement is among one of life’s most severe events that can have long-lasting consequences for young people [1, 2]. On top of the higher mortality levels, individuals in lower-income countries tend to have more siblings, which increases their exposure to the risk of having a sibling die It is unclear if the clustering of deaths within larger families results in bereaved individuals experiencing an actual hollowing of their sibling set, and fewer adult siblings, or if larger family sizes offset these losses, resulting in bereaved youth having a comparable number of remaining siblings as those never bereaved. Sibling mortality burden in low-income countries overview of the frequency of, and circumstances surrounding, sibling mortality, this study offers a guidepost for future work interested in identifying the individual and life course implications of sibling death in the world regions where this experience is concentrated

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