# For reducing premature adult mortality in India, education matters more than income

**Authors:** Moradhvaj Dhakad, Erich Striessnig, Nandita Saikia, Samir K.C., Wolfgang Lutz

PMC · DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2503809123 · Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America · 2026-02-02

## TL;DR

In India, education has a greater impact on reducing adult deaths than income, suggesting policies should prioritize education to improve health outcomes.

## Contribution

This study demonstrates that education has a stronger protective effect than wealth in reducing mid-age mortality in India.

## Key findings

- Education's protective effect on mortality exceeds that of wealth at both individual and community levels.
- Mid-age mortality declines by 14% for men and 13% for women with higher education, regardless of wealth.
- Community-level education, especially for women, significantly reduces adult mortality risks.

## Abstract

Due to progress in reducing infant mortality, the global agenda for preventing premature mortality in recent years has been shifting to adults. While there is strong evidence on the role of socioeconomic factors in reducing infant mortality, drivers of adult mortality risk remain underresearched. In this study, we systematically assess the role of education in comparison to wealth in explaining mid-age (15 to 59 y) mortality differentials in India, where one fifth of global adult deaths occur. Our results suggest that both at the individual and community level, the protective effect of education by far exceeds the effect of wealth. This has important implications for the mortality-related SDGs and for setting development priorities in India and other low-income countries.

Preventing premature death is a global policy objective reflected in the SDGs. While numerous studies have found socioeconomic factors to be significantly associated with premature death everywhere in the world, the debate on the relative effect of such factors on mid-age (15 to 59 ages) has not received enough attention, particularly in low-income countries, where this question is pertinent due to scant resources in the healthcare sector. Using nationally representative, longitudinal data from the India Human Development Survey, we assess the relative importance of individual- and community-level education vs. income and wealth in India, where approximately 3 million premature deaths occur annually in mid-ages. We find a clear downward gradient in mid-age mortality with increasing education within each wealth category, whereas no consistent mortality advantage with increasing wealth status is visible within education subgroups. Multilevel logistic regression models show that the decline in the risk of death across the education spectrum by far exceeds (14% for male and 13% for female) the decline moving along the wealth distribution, even after controlling for other relevant demographic, socioeconomic, regional variables. Along with the direct effect of individual-level educational attainment, we also find a protective effect of education at the community level, particularly for women. Based on these findings, we infer that educational attainment is essential for reducing mid-age mortality in India. Population and health policies in developing countries, therefore, should focus on education to prevent adult mortality.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** death (MESH:D003643)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

85 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12890904/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12890904