Borooah Vani K
School of Economics and Politics, University of Ulster, Newtownabbey, Northern Ireland, UK.
Econ Hum Biol. 2004 Mar;2(1):119-38. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2003.12.005.
Diarrhoea, claiming over three million young lives in the world every year, is the second biggest killer of children in developing countries. Using data for over 13,000 children in rural India, under the age of 3 years, this paper examines the relative effects of the different factors--inter alia the quality of the water supply, mother's literacy, housing conditions, and the level of development of the villages in which the children lived--contributing to diarrhoea. The paper highlights the importance of two factors: that children born to undernourished mothers may be more susceptible to infection than children whose mothers are well nourished, and that good hygienic practices within the home, such as washing hands with soap before feeding a child, can reduce the incidence of diarrhoea. The paper also quantifies the relative strength of the factors that determine whether mothers do so. The results emphasize the importance of mothers being literate, of household affluence and of institutional support (through the availability of trained midwives and mother and child centres in villages) in promoting domestic hygiene.
腹泻每年在全球夺走超过300万儿童的生命,是发展中国家儿童的第二大杀手。本文利用印度农村地区13000多名3岁以下儿童的数据,研究了不同因素(尤其是供水质量、母亲的识字率、住房条件以及儿童所居住村庄的发展水平)对腹泻的相关影响。本文强调了两个因素的重要性:营养不良母亲所生的孩子可能比母亲营养良好的孩子更容易感染,以及家庭内良好的卫生习惯,如在喂孩子前用肥皂洗手,可以降低腹泻的发生率。本文还量化了决定母亲是否这样做的因素的相对强度。结果强调了母亲识字、家庭富裕以及机构支持(通过村庄中有训练有素的助产士和母婴中心)在促进家庭卫生方面的重要性。