Hessel Philipp, González Jaramillo María José, Rasella Davide, Duran Ana Clara, Sarmiento Olga L
Philipp Hessel (
María José González Jaramillo is a research fellow in the research department at the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington, D.C.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2020 Jul;39(7):1166-1174. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2019.01125.
We assessed the effects of female political representation on mortality among children younger than age five in Brazil and the extent to which this effect operates through coverage with conditional cash transfers and primary care services. We combined data on under-five mortality rates with data on women elected as mayors or representatives in state and federal legislatures for 3,167 municipalities during 2000-15. Results from fixed-effects regression models suggest that the election of a female mayor and increases in the shares of women elected to state legislatures and to the federal Chamber of Deputies to 20 percent or more were significantly associated with declines in under-five mortality. Increasing the political representation of women was likely associated with beneficial effects on child mortality through pathways that expanded access to primary health care and conditional cash transfer programs.
我们评估了巴西女性政治代表权对五岁以下儿童死亡率的影响,以及这种影响通过有条件现金转移支付和初级保健服务覆盖范围发挥作用的程度。我们将五岁以下儿童死亡率数据与2000年至2015年期间3167个市当选市长或州及联邦立法机构代表的女性数据相结合。固定效应回归模型的结果表明,女性市长的当选以及当选州立法机构和联邦众议院的女性比例增加到20%或更多与五岁以下儿童死亡率的下降显著相关。增加女性的政治代表权可能通过扩大获得初级卫生保健和有条件现金转移支付计划的途径,对儿童死亡率产生有益影响。