Caldwell J, McDonald P
Health Policy Educ. 1982 Mar;2(3-4):251-67. doi: 10.1016/0165-2281(82)90012-1.
Data from the World Fertility Survey in ten Third World countries are used to test the conclusion, based on a Nigerian study, that material education is important in reducing child mortality. The analysis confirms the major importance of parental education, the impact of which is probably greater than both income factors and access to health facilities combined. Rural/urban differentials are of small importance once parental education has been controlled. The findings of the Nigerian study are modified in that paternal education is also shown to be important, though not as important as maternal education, and the step from primary to secondary schooling is more important than that from illiteracy to primary schooling. The massive declines in child mortality during the last third of a century have been the result not only of technological and economic change but also of social change, of which the most important component for the survival of children through the first years of life has been parental education. It is suggested that schooling introduces parents to a global culture of largely Western origin and loosens their ties to traditional cultures. Age and sex differentiations in power, decision-making and benefits within the larger family are reduced when schooling brings about a new family system in which women and children are allocated higher priorities in terms of care and allocation of food and in which parents can make decisions about health and child care without reference to their elders.
来自十个第三世界国家的世界生育率调查数据,被用于检验基于一项尼日利亚研究得出的结论:母亲教育对于降低儿童死亡率至关重要。分析证实了父母教育的重要性,其影响可能大于收入因素和获得医疗设施的机会两者之和。一旦控制了父母教育因素,城乡差异的重要性就很小了。尼日利亚研究的结果有所修正,因为父亲教育也被证明是重要的,尽管不如母亲教育重要,而且从小学到中学教育的提升比从文盲到小学教育更为重要。在过去三十年里,儿童死亡率大幅下降不仅是技术和经济变革的结果,也是社会变革的结果,其中对儿童生命最初几年生存最重要的因素是父母教育。有人认为,学校教育使父母接触到主要源自西方的全球文化,并削弱了他们与传统文化的联系。当学校教育带来一种新的家庭体系,在这种体系中,妇女和儿童在照顾和食物分配方面被赋予更高的优先级,并且父母可以在不参考长辈意见的情况下就健康和儿童护理做出决策时,大家庭内部在权力、决策和福利方面的年龄和性别差异就会减少。