{"title":"Exploring the Factors Underlying the Narrowing Urban Advantage in Child Mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Scoping Review.","authors":"Elle Quirey Parker, Gonnie Klabbers","doi":"10.1007/s11524-025-00989-6","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>It is widely acknowledged that child mortality rates have been higher in rural than urban areas in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA); a phenomenon appreciated as the urban advantage. However, since at least the 1980s, this urban advantage has been narrowing, and in some cases reversing across SSA. While existing studies have primarily focused on establishing this relationship, few clearly define what constitutes urban or rural, with authors using different operationalizations. Even fewer explore the underlying drivers of change. Rural and urban health outcomes are associated with both the social determinants of health and the wider political economy of health systems. This study aims to elucidate the factors underpinning the narrowing urban advantage in by examining how such factors are differentially distributed and operate across urban and rural contexts. A scoping search was conducted for English-language peer-reviewed published articles after 1990 on urban and rural child health disparities in SSA. Databases used included PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science. Overall, 21 articles were included in the scope of this review. This review adhered to PRISMA-ScR guidelines (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews). This review examines the extent to which urban areas in SSA continue to confer a survival advantage in child mortality, and the mechanisms underlying shifts in this trend. Four key categories of determinants-environmental, healthcare-related, sociodemographic, and disease/morbidity-related-consistently emerge across the literature, though their significance and strength vary across rural and urban settings. Notably, the review identifies a growing influence of intra-urban inequality, driven by informal urbanization and the expansion of slums, as a central factor in the narrowing urban advantage. The operationalization of urbanicity and rurality was inconsistent across studies, and rigid geographical classifications often obscured important spatial and contextual nuances. These findings underscore the limitations of conventional rural-urban comparisons and highlight the need for more nuanced frameworks that reflect the complex, evolving landscape of urban poverty and child health in SSA. The spatial reconfiguration of urban poverty appears to be modifying the distribution of child health risks in manners not captured by traditional urban-rural comparisons. Future research should focus on employing an urban continuum in demographic research, accounting for intra-urban inequities within the context of rapid urbanization processes which are altering the urban health landscape, and reshaping the social determinants of child mortality across the urban-rural spectrum.</p>","PeriodicalId":49964,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Urban Health-Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine","volume":" ","pages":"775-788"},"PeriodicalIF":4.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-08-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12484451/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Urban Health-Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-025-00989-6","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2025/9/4 0:00:00","PubModel":"Epub","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
It is widely acknowledged that child mortality rates have been higher in rural than urban areas in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA); a phenomenon appreciated as the urban advantage. However, since at least the 1980s, this urban advantage has been narrowing, and in some cases reversing across SSA. While existing studies have primarily focused on establishing this relationship, few clearly define what constitutes urban or rural, with authors using different operationalizations. Even fewer explore the underlying drivers of change. Rural and urban health outcomes are associated with both the social determinants of health and the wider political economy of health systems. This study aims to elucidate the factors underpinning the narrowing urban advantage in by examining how such factors are differentially distributed and operate across urban and rural contexts. A scoping search was conducted for English-language peer-reviewed published articles after 1990 on urban and rural child health disparities in SSA. Databases used included PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science. Overall, 21 articles were included in the scope of this review. This review adhered to PRISMA-ScR guidelines (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews). This review examines the extent to which urban areas in SSA continue to confer a survival advantage in child mortality, and the mechanisms underlying shifts in this trend. Four key categories of determinants-environmental, healthcare-related, sociodemographic, and disease/morbidity-related-consistently emerge across the literature, though their significance and strength vary across rural and urban settings. Notably, the review identifies a growing influence of intra-urban inequality, driven by informal urbanization and the expansion of slums, as a central factor in the narrowing urban advantage. The operationalization of urbanicity and rurality was inconsistent across studies, and rigid geographical classifications often obscured important spatial and contextual nuances. These findings underscore the limitations of conventional rural-urban comparisons and highlight the need for more nuanced frameworks that reflect the complex, evolving landscape of urban poverty and child health in SSA. The spatial reconfiguration of urban poverty appears to be modifying the distribution of child health risks in manners not captured by traditional urban-rural comparisons. Future research should focus on employing an urban continuum in demographic research, accounting for intra-urban inequities within the context of rapid urbanization processes which are altering the urban health landscape, and reshaping the social determinants of child mortality across the urban-rural spectrum.
人们普遍承认,撒哈拉以南非洲农村地区的儿童死亡率高于城市地区(SSA);被认为是城市优势的现象。然而,至少自20世纪80年代以来,这种城市优势一直在缩小,在某些情况下,在整个SSA发生逆转。虽然现有的研究主要集中于建立这种关系,但很少有研究明确界定什么是城市或农村,作者使用不同的操作方法。更少的人探讨了变化的潜在驱动因素。农村和城市卫生结果与卫生的社会决定因素和卫生系统更广泛的政治经济有关。本研究旨在通过考察这些因素在城市和农村背景下的差异分布和作用,阐明支撑城市优势缩小的因素。对1990年以后发表的关于SSA城乡儿童健康差异的英文同行评议文章进行了范围搜索。使用的数据库包括PubMed、Embase和Web of Science。总的来说,21篇文章被纳入本综述的范围。本综述遵循PRISMA-ScR指南(系统评价的首选报告项目和范围评价的元分析扩展)。本综述探讨了在多大程度上,SSA的城市地区继续赋予儿童死亡率的生存优势,以及这种趋势变化的潜在机制。四个关键类别的决定因素——环境、医疗保健相关、社会人口统计学和疾病/发病率相关——在文献中不断出现,尽管它们的重要性和强度在农村和城市环境中有所不同。值得注意的是,审查指出,在非正规城市化和贫民窟扩大的推动下,城市内部不平等的影响越来越大,这是城市优势缩小的一个核心因素。在不同的研究中,城市化和乡村化的操作化是不一致的,严格的地理分类往往掩盖了重要的空间和环境的细微差别。这些发现强调了传统的城乡比较的局限性,并强调需要更细致的框架,以反映SSA城市贫困和儿童健康的复杂和不断变化的情况。城市贫困的空间重新配置似乎正在改变儿童健康风险的分布,而传统的城乡比较无法捕捉到这种变化。未来的研究应侧重于在人口研究中采用城市连续体,在快速城市化进程的背景下考虑城市内部的不平等现象,这种不平等正在改变城市健康状况,并重新确定城乡范围内儿童死亡率的社会决定因素。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Urban Health is the premier and authoritative source of rigorous analyses to advance the health and well-being of people in cities. The Journal provides a platform for interdisciplinary exploration of the evidence base for the broader determinants of health and health inequities needed to strengthen policies, programs, and governance for urban health.
The Journal publishes original data, case studies, commentaries, book reviews, executive summaries of selected reports, and proceedings from important global meetings. It welcomes submissions presenting new analytic methods, including systems science approaches to urban problem solving. Finally, the Journal provides a forum linking scholars, practitioners, civil society, and policy makers from the multiple sectors that can influence the health of urban populations.