Katapa R S
J Biosoc Sci. 2006 May;38(3):327-39. doi: 10.1017/S0021932005007169.
Female- and male-headed households were compared using data from a Demographic and Health Survey conducted in Tanzania in 1996. Chi-squared tests showed that sex of head of household was highly significantly associated with: residence, household size and composition, radio ownership, having enough food to eat, and age and marital status of head of household. An analysis by the logit regression model showed that female-headed households were more likely than male-headed households to be in rural areas, be small, have fewer men, not have radios and not have enough food to eat. The majority of female heads of households were unmarried and older than male heads of households. The implication is that female-headed households are poorer than male-headed households.
利用1996年在坦桑尼亚进行的一项人口与健康调查的数据,对以女性为户主的家庭和以男性为户主的家庭进行了比较。卡方检验表明,户主的性别与以下因素高度显著相关:居住地点、家庭规模和构成、收音机拥有情况、是否有足够的食物可吃,以及户主的年龄和婚姻状况。逻辑回归模型分析表明,以女性为户主的家庭比以男性为户主的家庭更有可能位于农村地区、规模较小、男性较少、没有收音机且没有足够的食物可吃。大多数女性户主未婚,且年龄比男性户主大。这意味着以女性为户主的家庭比以男性为户主的家庭更贫困。