posts_gdocs: 1DtFLlOuWDLbs3wgycj0wMF64BoyYX16Dn6Z-NRnznxw
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id | slug | type | content | published | createdAt | publishedAt | updatedAt | publicationContext | revisionId | breadcrumbs | markdown | title |
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1DtFLlOuWDLbs3wgycj0wMF64BoyYX16Dn6Z-NRnznxw | declining-child-mortality-fast-and-slow | data-insight | { "body": [ { "size": "narrow", "type": "image", "filename": "swe-kor-child-mortality-desktop.png", "parseErrors": [], "smallFilename": "swe-kor-child-mortality-mobile.png" }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "Two centuries ago, about one in three children in Sweden died before they were five years old, as you can see on the chart.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "Since then, the child mortality rate in Sweden has declined to 0.2%.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "South Korea achieved a similar reduction much faster. This is often the case: those countries that first achieve an improvement in living conditions often need much longer than some of those countries catching up later \u2014 countries that catch up can learn from what worked elsewhere.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "url": "https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/child-mortality?country=SWE~KOR", "children": [ { "text": "Explore this data", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": " \u2192", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] } ], "refs": { "errors": [], "definitions": {} }, "type": "data-insight", "title": "Declining child mortality, fast and slow", "authors": [ "Max Roser" ], "approved-by": "Ed", "grapher-url": "<a href=\"https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/child-mortality?country=SWE~KOR\">https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/child-mortality?country=SWE~KOR</a>" } |
1 | 2023-12-28 17:47:36 | 2024-03-13 07:48:17 | 2024-03-13 07:48:20 | unlisted | ALBJ4LsebeeDT5svCmGWnB_n_AVZmqP6Yt6ON3iVQ2lXUBfOJK-CCEpojPqze4IjTUGZU5yclfQ47jiNqfwyWA | <Image filename="swe-kor-child-mortality-desktop.png"/> Two centuries ago, about one in three children in Sweden died before they were five years old, as you can see on the chart. Since then, the child mortality rate in Sweden has declined to 0.2%. South Korea achieved a similar reduction much faster. This is often the case: those countries that first achieve an improvement in living conditions often need much longer than some of those countries catching up later — countries that catch up can learn from what worked elsewhere. [Explore this data](https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/child-mortality?country=SWE~KOR) → | Declining child mortality, fast and slow |