Fagbamigbe Adeniyi F, Bamgboye Elijah A, Yusuf Bidemi O, Akinyemi Joshua O, Issa Bolakale K, Ngige Evelyn, Amida Perpetua, Bashorun Adebobola, Abatta Emmanuel
Department of Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, Faculty of Public Health, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
NASCP, Federal Ministry of Health, Abuja, Nigeria.
Health Econ Rev. 2015 Feb 11;5:5. doi: 10.1186/s13561-015-0043-9. eCollection 2015.
Recently, Nigeria emerged as the largest economy in Africa and the 26th in the world. However, a pertinent question is how this new economic status has impacted on the wealth and health of her citizens. There is a dearth of empirical study on the wealth distribution in Nigeria which could be important in explaining the general disparities in their health seeking behavior. An adequate knowledge of Nigeria wealth distribution will no doubt inform policy makers in their decision making to improve the quality of life of Nigerians.
This study is a retrospective analysis of the assets of household in Nigeria collected during the 2012 National HIV/AIDS and Reproductive Health Survey (NARHS Plus 2). We used the principal component analysis methods to construct wealth quintiles across households in Nigeria. At 5% significance level, we used ANOVA to determine differences in some health outcomes across the WQs and chi-square test to assess association between WQs and some reproductive health seeking behaviours.
The wealth quintiles were found to be internally valid and coherent. However, there is a wide gap in the reproductive health seeking behavior of household members across the wealth quintiles with members of households in lower quintiles having lesser likelihood (33.0%) to receive antenatal care than among those in the highest quintiles (91.9%). While only 3% were currently using modern contraceptives in the lowest wealth quintile, it was 17.4% among the highest wealth quintile (p < 0.05).
The wealth quintiles showed a great disparity in the standard of living of Nigerian households across geo-political zones, states and rural-urban locations which had greatly influenced household health seeking behavior.
最近,尼日利亚成为非洲最大的经济体,在世界排名第26位。然而,一个相关的问题是,这种新的经济地位如何影响其公民的财富和健康。关于尼日利亚财富分配的实证研究匮乏,而这对于解释其健康寻求行为的总体差异可能很重要。充分了解尼日利亚的财富分配无疑将为政策制定者的决策提供信息,以提高尼日利亚人的生活质量。
本研究是对2012年全国艾滋病毒/艾滋病和生殖健康调查(NARHS Plus 2)期间收集的尼日利亚家庭资产进行的回顾性分析。我们使用主成分分析方法构建尼日利亚各家庭的财富五分位数。在5%的显著性水平下,我们使用方差分析来确定不同财富五分位数之间一些健康结果的差异,并使用卡方检验来评估财富五分位数与一些生殖健康寻求行为之间的关联。
发现财富五分位数在内部是有效的且连贯的。然而,不同财富五分位数的家庭成员在生殖健康寻求行为上存在很大差距,财富五分位数较低的家庭中的成员接受产前护理的可能性(33.0%)低于财富五分位数最高的家庭中的成员(91.9%)。在最低财富五分位数中,目前只有3%的人使用现代避孕方法,而在最高财富五分位数中这一比例为17.4%(p<0.05)。
财富五分位数显示出尼日利亚家庭在地理政治区域、州和城乡地区的生活水平存在巨大差异,这对家庭的健康寻求行为产生了重大影响。