Female mortality rates in urban areas of Russia during WWII 1941-1944, by age
The German invasion of the Soviet Union, in 1941, resulted in a dramatic rise in infant and child mortality rates. While the war was still ongoing in 1944, in Russia, the proportion of female deaths among children under five years was over 60 percent lower than it had been in the invasion's first year. In 1941, 51 percent of all female deaths were among those under five years old, and 29 percent of all female deaths were among infants below the age of one year. In comparison, the figures for male deaths were slightly lower among infants, as a higher share of the adult male population died as a direct result of the conflict, although the crude death rate (i.e. total number of deaths) was significantly higher in these years than at any other time in Soviet history.