Hatt Laurel E, Waters Hugh R
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2006 Jan;62(2):375-86. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.06.007. Epub 2005 Jul 25.
Diarrhea and respiratory infections account for more than two-fifths of all deaths among children under five. Parental education and economic status are well-known risk factors for child morbidity, but little is known about whether education and economic status operate synergistically or independently to influence children's health. Confirming the presence and direction of such interactions is important to better target education and development policies. Our objective is to test for interactions between parental education and economic status in predicting the risk of diarrhea and respiratory illness among children under five, before and after adjusting for key proximate risk factors. We pool 12 Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and nine Living Standards Measurement Surveys (LSMS) from Latin America, creating two large databases. Quintiles of economic status are constructed from principal components asset indices. We use logistic regression to analyze episodes of diarrhea and respiratory illness, and interactions between economic quintile and maternal and paternal education are evaluated via likelihood ratio tests. We find that mother's education and quintile interact synergistically in the DHS data, while results are inconclusive in the LSMS data. The effect of increasing maternal education appears to be more protective for children in wealthy families than for children in poor families. Conversely, improvements in economic status reduce health risks more for children whose mothers are better educated. Father's education is protective and operates independently of economic status. Our findings imply that poverty alleviation efforts occurring in concert with programs to educate women and girls will be more effective for improving children's health than either approach alone.
腹泻和呼吸道感染占五岁以下儿童死亡总数的五分之二以上。父母教育程度和经济状况是儿童发病的众所周知的风险因素,但对于教育和经济状况是协同作用还是独立作用以影响儿童健康,人们了解甚少。确定这种相互作用的存在和方向对于更好地制定教育和发展政策至关重要。我们的目标是在调整关键的直接风险因素之前和之后,测试父母教育程度和经济状况之间在预测五岁以下儿童腹泻和呼吸道疾病风险方面的相互作用。我们汇总了来自拉丁美洲的12项人口与健康调查(DHS)和9项生活水平测量调查(LSMS),创建了两个大型数据库。经济状况五分位数是根据主成分资产指数构建的。我们使用逻辑回归分析腹泻和呼吸道疾病发作情况,并通过似然比检验评估经济五分位数与母亲和父亲教育程度之间的相互作用。我们发现,在DHS数据中,母亲的教育程度和五分位数具有协同作用,而在LSMS数据中结果尚无定论。提高母亲教育程度对富裕家庭儿童的保护作用似乎比对贫困家庭儿童更大。相反,经济状况的改善对母亲受教育程度较高的儿童健康风险的降低作用更大。父亲的教育程度具有保护作用,且独立于经济状况发挥作用。我们的研究结果表明,与教育妇女和女童的计划协同开展的扶贫努力,在改善儿童健康方面将比单独采用任何一种方法都更有效。