The impact of immunization on the association between poverty and child survival: Evidence from Kassena-Nankana District of northern Ghana
- 2 November 2009
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in Scandinavian Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 38 (1) , 95-103
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1403494809352532
Abstract
Background: Research conducted in Africa has consistently demonstrated that parental poverty and low educational attainment adversely affect child survival. Research conducted elsewhere has demonstrated that low-cost vaccines against preventable diseases reduce childhood mortality. Therefore, the extension of vaccination to impoverished populations is widely assumed to diminish equity effects. Recent evidence that childhood mortality is increasing in many countries where vaccination programmes are active challenges this assumption. Data and methods: This paper marshals data from accurate and complete immunization records and survival histories for 18,368 children younger than five years in a rural northern Ghanaian population that is generally impoverished, but where family wealth and parental educational differentials exist nonetheless. Time-conditional Weibull hazard models are estimated to test the hypothesis that childhood immunization offsets the detrimental effects of poverty and low educational attainment. Conclusions: Findings show that the adverse effects of poverty disappear and that the effects of educational attainment are reduced in survival models that control for immunization status. This finding lends empirical support to policies that promote immunization as a strategic component of poverty-reduction programmes.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rapid achievement of the child survival millennium development goal: evidence from the Navrongo experiment in Northern GhanaTropical Medicine & International Health, 2007
- An Immeasurable Crisis? A Criticism of the Millennium Development Goals and Why They Cannot Be MeasuredPLoS Medicine, 2005
- Reaching the Poor with Health, Nutrition and Population ServicesPublished by World Bank ,2005
- Commentary: Contrary findings from Guinea-Bissau and Papua New GuineaInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 2004
- Comprehensive Versus Selective Primary Health Care: Lessons For Global Health PolicyHealth Affairs, 2004
- Where and why are 10 million children dying every year?The Lancet, 2003
- War, famine and excess child mortality in Africa: the role of parental educationInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 2001
- Routine vaccinations and child survival: follow up study in Guinea-Bissau, West Africa Commentary: an unexpected finding that needs confirmation or rejectionBMJ, 2000
- Modeling Survival Data: Extending the Cox ModelPublished by Springer Nature ,2000
- ASSESSING POPULATION DYNAMICS IN A RURAL AFRICAN SOCIETY: THE NAVRONGO DEMOGRAPHIC SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMJournal of Biosocial Science, 1999