In general human history, Omran's first phase occurs when human population sustains cyclic, low-growth, and mostly linear, up-and-down patterns associated with wars, famine, epidemic outbreaks, as well as small
golden ages, and localized periods of "prosperity". In early pre-agricultural history,
infant mortality rates were high and
average life expectancy low. Today, life expectancy in developing countries remains relatively low, as in many
Sub-Saharan African nations where it typically doesn't exceed 60 years of age. The second phase involves improved nutrition as a result of stable food production along with advances in medicine and the development of
health care systems. Mortality in Western Europe and North America was halved during the 19th century due to
closed sewage systems and clean water provided by public utilities, with a particular benefit for children of both sexes and to females in the adolescent and reproductive age periods, probably because the susceptibility of these groups to infectious and deficiency diseases is relatively high. An overall reduction in malnutrition enabled populations to better resist infectious disease. Treatment breakthroughs of importance included the initiation of
vaccination during the early nineteenth century, and the discovery of
penicillin in the mid 20th century, which led respectively to a widespread and dramatic decline in death rates from previously serious diseases such as
smallpox and
sepsis. Population growth rates surged in the 1950s, 1960's and 1970's to 1.8% per year and higher, with the world gaining 2 billion people between 1950 and the 1980s. A decline in mortality without a corresponding decline in fertility leads to a population pyramid assuming the shape of a bullet or a barrel, as young and middle-age groups comprise equivalent percentages of the population. Omran's third phase occurs when human birth rates drastically decline from highly positive
replacement rates to stable replacement numbers. In several European nations replacement rates have even become negative. This transition generally represents the net effect of individual choices on family size and the ability to implement those choices. Omran gives three possible factors tending to encourage reduced fertility rates: •
Bio-physiologic factors, associated with reduced infant mortality and the expectation of longer life in parents; •
Socioeconomic factors, associated with childhood survival and the economic challenges of large family size; and •
Psychological or emotional factors, where society as a whole changes its rationale and opinion on family size and parental energies are redirected to qualitative aspects of child-raising.
Impact on fertility Improvements in female and childhood survival that occur with the shift in health and disease patterns discussed above have distinct and seemingly contradictory effects on fertility. While better health and greater longevity enjoyed by females of reproductive age tend to enhance fertility, the reduced risks to infants and young children that occurs in the later stages of the transition tends to have the opposite effect: prolonged
breastfeeding associated with reduced mortality among infants and toddlers, together with parental recognition of improved childhood survival, tend to lengthen
birth intervals and depress overall reproductive rates.
Economic impact The transition may also be associated with
demographic movements to urban areas, and a shift from agriculture and labor-based production output to technological and
service-sector-based economies. This shift in demographic and disease profiles is currently under way in most developing nations, however every country is unique and transition speed is based on numerous geographical and sociopolitical factors. Whether the transition is due to socioeconomic improvements (as in developed countries) or by modern public health programs (as has been the case in many developing countries), the lowering of mortality and of infectious disease tends to increase economic productivity through better functioning of adult members of the labor force and through an increase in the proportion of children who survive and mature into productive members of society. ==Models of transition==