46 results on '"Sven Neelsen"'
Search Results
2. Child Health Outcome Inequalities in Low and Middle Income Countries
- Author
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Patrick Hoang-Vu Eozenou, Sven Neelsen, and Magnus Lindelow
- Subjects
child mortality ,stunting ,inequality ,concentration index ,economic growth ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Prior to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) era, considerable progress was made toward the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) health indicators. Despite these achievements, many countries failed to meet the MDG target levels, between-country inequalities in health outcomes did not improve, and many countries making progress in average indicator levels did so while at the same time seeing increasing within-country inequalities. We build on the existing literature documenting levels and trends in health inequalities by expanding the number of data-points under focus, and we contribute to this literature by analyzing the extent to which inequalities in child health outcomes are related to socioeconomic inequalities, and to aggregate income growth. The objective of this paper is to examine long-run trends in average population levels and within-country inequalities for two child health outcomes—the under-five mortality rate (U5MR) and stunting—in 102 countries across 6 regions. We find that only about a third of countries in our sample managed to both reduce U5MR levels and inequalities, and only a quarter did so for stunting. The fact that inequality in service coverage seems to follow a more favorable trend than inequality in health outcomes suggests that policies aiming to reduce health inequities should not only foster more equitable service coverage but also focus on the social determinants of health. Moreover, there is no strong correlation between changes in health inequalities and income growth, suggesting that income generating development policies alone will typically not suffice to improve health outcomes and reduce health inequalities.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Financial Protection in Health among the Elderly – A Global Stocktake
- Author
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Patrick Hoang-Vu Eozenou, Sven Neelsen, and Marc-Francois Smitz
- Subjects
universal health coverage ,financial protection ,out-of-pocket expenditure ,catastrophic health spending ,aging ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Universal Health Coverage is one of the key targets of the Sustainable Development Goals and it implies that everyone can access the healthcare they need without suffering financial hardship. In this paper, we use a large set of household surveys to examine if older populations are facing different degrees of financial hardship compared to younger populations. We find that while differences in average age structures between countries are not systematically associated with higher financial risk related to out-of-pocket health expenditures, there are large differences in financial hardship between younger and older households within countries. Households with more elderly members are more likely to face catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health payments compared to younger households, and this age gradient is stronger for the poorest segments of the population. Making progress toward Universal Health Coverage will require extension and improved targeting of benefit packages and financial protection to meet the health needs of older adults, and especially the poorest and most vulnerable segments of elderly populations.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Medical expenditures: not the only source of financial hardship – Authors' reply
- Author
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Adam Wagstaff and Sven Neelsen
- Subjects
Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2020
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5. A comprehensive assessment of universal health coverage in 111 countries: a retrospective observational study
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Adam Wagstaff, DPhil and Sven Neelsen, PhD
- Subjects
Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: The goal of universal health coverage (UHC) requires that everyone receive needed health services, and that families who get needed services do not suffer undue financial hardship. Tracking progress towards UHC requires measurement of both these dimensions, and a way of trading them off against one another. Methods: We measured service coverage by a weighted geometric average of four prevention indicators (antenatal care, full immunisation, and screening for breast and cervical cancers) and four treatment indicators (skilled birth attendance, inpatient admission, and treatment for acute respiratory infection and diarrhoea), financial protection by the incidence of catastrophic health expenditures (those exceeding 10% of household consumption or income), and a country's UHC performance as a geometric average of the service coverage index and the complement of the incidence of catastrophic expenditures. Where possible, we adjusted service coverage for inequality, penalising countries with a high level of inequality. The bulk of data used in this study were from the World Bank's Health Equity and Financial Protection Indicators database (2019 version), comprising data from household surveys. Gaps in the data were supplemented with other survey data and (where necessary) non-survey data from other sources (administrative, modelled, and imputed data). Findings: A low incidence of catastrophic expenses sometimes reflects low service coverage (often in low-income countries) but sometimes occurs despite high service coverage (often in high-income countries). At a given level of service coverage, financial protection also varies. UHC index scores are generally higher in higher-income countries, but there are variations within income groups. Adjusting the UHC index for inequality in service coverage makes little difference in some countries, but reduces it by more than 10% in others. Seven of the 12 countries for which we were able to produce trend data have increased their UHC index over time (with the greatest average yearly increases seen in Ghana [1·43%], Indonesia [1·85%], and Vietnam [2·26%]), mostly by improving both financial protection and service coverage. Some increased their UHC index, despite reductions in financial protection, by substantially increasing their service coverage. The UHC index decreased in five of 12 countries with trend data, mostly because financial protection worsened with stagnant or declining service coverage. Our UHC indicators (except inpatient admissions) are significantly and positively associated with GDP per capita, and most are correlated with the share of health spending channelled through social health insurance and government schemes. However, associations of our UHC indicators with the share of GDP spent on health and the shares of health spending channelled through non-profit and private insurance are ambiguous. Interpretation: Progress towards UHC can be tracked using an index that captures both service coverage and financial protection. Although per-capita income is a good predictor of a country's UHC index score, some countries perform better than others in the same income group or even in the income group above their own. Strong UHC performance is correlated with the share of a country's health budget that is channelled through government and social health insurance schemes. Funding: None.
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- 2020
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6. Effective Coverage: A Framework Linking Coverage and Quality
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
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- 2022
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7. Quality of Care: A Framework for Measurement
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
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- 2022
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8. Performance-Based Financing Improves Coverage of Reproductive, Maternal, and Child Health Interventions
- Author
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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9. Policy Alternatives to Performance-Based Financing
- Author
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
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- 2022
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10. Front Matter
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
- Published
- 2022
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11. Introduction
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
- Published
- 2022
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12. Decomposing the Constraints to Quality of Care Using Data on Antenatal Care Consultations from Five Sub-Saharan African Countries
- Author
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
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- 2022
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13. Overview
- Author
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
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- 2022
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14. Conclusion and Operational Implications
- Author
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
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- 2022
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15. Performance-Based Financing as a Health System Reform and Cautionary Evidence on Performance Pay and Irrelevant Care
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
- Published
- 2022
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16. Compulsion and redistribution remain key tenets for financing universal health coverage
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Ajay Tandon, Patrick Hoang-Vu Eozenou, and Sven Neelsen
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Health (social science) ,History and Philosophy of Science - Published
- 2023
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17. Financial Incentives to Increase Utilization of Reproductive, Maternal, and Child Health Services in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Sven Neelsen, Adam Wagstaff, Damien de Walque, and Jed Friedman
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Voucher ,Incentive ,Systematic review ,business.industry ,Meta-analysis ,Conditional cash transfer ,Regression discontinuity design ,Psychological intervention ,Demographic economics ,business ,Reproductive health - Abstract
Financial incentives for health providers and households are increasingly used to improve reproductive, maternal, and child health service coverage in low- and middle-income countries. This study provides a quantitative synthesis of their effectiveness. A systematic review was conducted of the effects of performance-based financing, voucher, and conditional cash transfer programs on six reproductive, maternal, and child health service indicators, with eligible evidence coming from randomized controlled trials and studies using double-difference, instrumental variables, and regression discontinuity designs. Four literature searches were conducted between September 2016 and March 2021 using seven academic databases, Google Scholar, development agency and think tank websites, and previous systematic reviews. Random effects meta-analysis was used to obtain mean effect sizes. From 58 eligible references 212 impact estimates were extracted, which were synthesized into 130 program-specific effect sizes. Financial incentives increase coverage of all considered reproductive, maternal, and child health indicators, but mean effects sizes are of modest magnitude. Effect size heterogeneity is typically low to moderate, and there is no indication that study bias risk, baseline indicator levels, or a combination of provider- and household-level incentives impact effect sizes. There is, however, weak evidence that mean effect sizes are somewhat smaller for performance-based financing than for voucher and conditional cash transfer programs, and that the increase in income, rather than the incentive itself, drives coverage improvements. Financial incentives improve reproductive, maternal, and child health service coverage. If future research confirms the preliminary finding that performance-based financing has smaller effects, voucher and conditional cash transfer programs are the preferred policy option among incentive interventions to achieve higher reproductive, maternal, and child health service coverage. The relative effectiveness and efficiency of incentives compared with unconditional increases of provider and household incomes, however, need to be studied further.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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18. Financial Protection in Health among the Elderly – A Global Stocktake
- Author
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Sven Neelsen, Marc-Francois Smitz, and Patrick Eozenou
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Health Informatics ,universal health coverage ,Older population ,out-of-pocket expenditure ,R5-920 ,Health Information Management ,Universal Health Insurance ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,Humans ,Financial protection ,education ,financial protection ,Poverty ,Health needs ,Aged ,media_common ,Sustainable development ,Family Characteristics ,education.field_of_study ,catastrophic health spending ,business.industry ,Financial risk ,aging ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Payment ,Demographic economics ,Business ,Health Expenditures ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Universal Health Coverage is one of the key targets of the Sustainable Development Goals and it implies that everyone can access the healthcare they need without suffering financial hardship. In this paper, we use a large set of household surveys to examine if older populations are facing different degrees of financial hardship compared to younger populations. We find that while differences in average age structures between countries are not systematically associated with higher financial risk related to out-of-pocket health expenditures, there are large differences in financial hardship between younger and older households within countries. Households with more elderly members are more likely to face catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health payments compared to younger households, and this age gradient is stronger for the poorest segments of the population. Making progress toward Universal Health Coverage will require extension and improved targeting of benefit packages and financial protection to meet the health needs of older adults, and especially the poorest and most vulnerable segments of elderly populations.
- Published
- 2021
19. Review of Public Health Expenditure in the Republic of Tajikistan
- Author
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Farrukh Egamov, Husniya Dorgabekova, Kate Madeville, and Sven Neelsen
- Subjects
Economic growth ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Public health ,Political science ,medicine ,The Republic - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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20. Child Health Outcome Inequalities in Low and Middle Income Countries
- Author
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Magnus Lindelow, Sven Neelsen, and Patrick Eozenou
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,inequality ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Health Informatics ,child mortality ,R5-920 ,Health Information Management ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Development economics ,Economics ,Humans ,Social determinants of health ,Child ,education ,Developing Countries ,concentration index ,media_common ,Sustainable development ,education.field_of_study ,Child Health ,stunting ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Millennium Development Goals ,economic growth ,Health indicator ,Child mortality ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Income ,Aggregate income ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Prior to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) era, considerable progress was made toward the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) health indicators. Despite these achievements, many countries failed to meet the MDG target levels, between-country inequalities in health outcomes did not improve, and many countries making progress in average indicator levels did so while at the same time seeing increasing within-country inequalities. We build on the existing literature documenting levels and trends in health inequalities by expanding the number of data-points under focus, and we contribute to this literature by analyzing the extent to which inequalities in child health outcomes are related to socioeconomic inequalities, and to aggregate income growth. The objective of this paper is to examine long-run trends in average population levels and within-country inequalities for two child health outcomes-the under-five mortality rate (U5MR) and stunting-in 102 countries across 6 regions. We find that only about a third of countries in our sample managed to both reduce U5MR levels and inequalities, and only a quarter did so for stunting. The fact that inequality in service coverage seems to follow a more favorable trend than inequality in health outcomes suggests that policies aiming to reduce health inequities should not only foster more equitable service coverage but also focus on the social determinants of health. Moreover, there is no strong correlation between changes in health inequalities and income growth, suggesting that income generating development policies alone will typically not suffice to improve health outcomes and reduce health inequalities.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Universal health coverage: A (social insurance) job half done?
- Author
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Eddy van Doorslaer, Owen O'Donnell, Supon Limwattananon, Sven Neelsen, Health Economics (HE), and Applied Economics
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Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Earnings ,business.industry ,050204 development studies ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Building and Construction ,Development ,Standard of living ,Social insurance ,Social protection ,0502 economics and business ,Health care ,Demographic economics ,Economic impact analysis ,050207 economics ,business ,Panel data - Abstract
Evidence on households’ ability to smooth consumption over health shocks is mostly obtained from environments where there is little or no formal insurance of either medical expenses or sickness-related earnings losses. To establish whether households remain economically vulnerable to illness after the introduction of universal health coverage (UHC), we examine the impact of health shocks of different severity on informal workers in Thailand who are entitled to comprehensive public medical care but lack social protection of earnings. Using three years of panel data, we find that the most severe illness that strikes an initially healthy worker reduces household earnings by almost one third and, despite UHC, raises out-of-pocket spending on medical care by around two thirds. However, households are able to protect spending on goods other than medical care by drawing on informal insurance, credit and savings. These coping strategies substitute for the lack of formal earnings insurance and fill gaps in the effective health care coverage. On average, the combination of UHC and informal insurance of the residual risks does a reasonably good job of protecting living standards from the economic impact of illness, at least in the short term.
- Published
- 2019
22. Medical expenditures: not the only source of financial hardship – Authors' reply
- Author
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Sven Neelsen and Adam Wagstaff
- Subjects
Actuarial science ,Poverty ,Universal health insurance ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Cost of illness ,MEDLINE ,Retrospective cohort study ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,General Medicine ,Business - Published
- 2020
23. Improving Effective Coverage in Health : Do Financial Incentives Work?
- Author
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Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, Ellen Van de Poel, Damien de Walque, Eeshani Kandpal, Adam Wagstaff, Jed Friedman, Sven Neelsen, Moritz Piatti-Fünfkirchen, Anja Sautmann, Gil Shapira, and Ellen Van de Poel
- Subjects
- Merit pay, Health facilities--Finance, Managed care plans (Medical care)--Finance
- Abstract
In many low- and middle-income countries, health coverage has improved dramatically in the past two decades, but health outcomes have not. As such, effective coverage--a measure of service delivery that meets a minimum standard of quality--remains unacceptably low.'Improving Effective Coverage in Health'examines one specific policy approach to improving effective coverage: financial incentives in the form of performance-based financing (PBF), a package reform that typically includes performance pay to frontline health workers as well as facility autonomy, transparency, and community engagement.This Policy Research Report draws on a rich set of rigorous studies and new analysis. When compared with business-as-usual, in low-income settings with centralized health systems PBF can result in substantial gains in effective coverage. However, the relative benefits of PBF--the performance pay component in particular--are less clear when it is compared with two alternative approaches, direct facility financing, which provides operating budgets to frontline health services with facility autonomy on allocation, but not performance pay, and demand-side financial support for health services (that is, conditional cash transfers and vouchers). Although PBF often results in improvements on the margins, closing the substantial gaps in effective health coverage is not yet within reach for many countries. Nonetheless, important lessons and experiences from the rollout of PBF over the past decade can guide health financing into the future. In particular, to be successful, health financing reform may need to pivot from performance pay while retaining the elements of direct facility financing, autonomy, transparency, and community engagement.
- Published
- 2022
24. Progressive Universalism? The Impact of Targeted Coverage on Healthcare Access and Expenditures in Peru
- Author
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Owen O'Donnell, Sven Neelsen, Applied Economics, and Health Economics (HE)
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Financing, Personal ,Economic growth ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Distribution (economics) ,Entitlement ,Health Services Accessibility ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ambulatory care ,Universal Health Insurance ,Peru ,0502 economics and business ,Health care ,Ambulatory Care ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,050207 economics ,media_common ,Receipt ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Insurance, Health ,Inpatient care ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Quarter (United States coin) ,Health Care Reform ,Female ,Demographic economics ,Health Expenditures ,business - Abstract
Like other countries seeking a progressive path to universalism, Peru has attempted to reduce inequalities in access to health care by granting the poor entitlement to tax-financed basic care without charge. We identify the impact of this policy by comparing the target population's change in health care utilization with that of poor adults already covered through employment-based insurance. There are positive effects on receipt of ambulatory care and medication that are largest among the elderly and the poorest. The probability of getting formal health care when sick is increased by almost two fifths, but the likelihood of being unable to afford treatment is reduced by more than a quarter. Consistent with the shallow coverage offered, there is no impact on use of inpatient care. Neither is there any effect on average out-of-pocket health care expenditure, but medical spending is reduced by up to 25% in the top quarter of the distribution. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Published
- 2017
25. The 2019 Update of the Health Equity and Financial Protection Indicators Database: An Overview
- Author
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Sven Neelsen, Marc-Francois Smitz, Adam Wagstaff, and Patrick Eozenou
- Subjects
Estimation ,Inpatient care ,Database ,030503 health policy & services ,Millennium Development Goals ,computer.software_genre ,Health indicator ,Health equity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Survey data collection ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Business ,0305 other medical science ,Raw data ,Utilization rate ,computer - Abstract
This paper outlines changes that have been made in the 2019 version of the Health Equity and Financial Protection Indicators database. On the financial protection side, the changes include an increase in the number of indicators from five to 14; revisions to several previous data points, reflecting the analysis of new surveys (or adaptations thereof); and refinements to the estimation of out-of-pocket expenditures. On the health equity side, the 2019 database includes 198 more data points than the 9,733 in the 2018 database, reflecting the addition of 535 new datapoints, and the dropping of 337 previously included data points now considered to be substandard.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The greek famine of 1941-1942 and its impact
- Author
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Markus Stratmann, Sven Neelsen, and Health Economics (HE)
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History ,Natural experiment ,Occupational prestige ,medicine.disease ,Educational attainment ,humanities ,Malnutrition ,Fetal Stage ,medicine ,Famine ,Early childhood ,SDG 2 - Zero Hunger ,Socioeconomic status ,Demography - Abstract
The Greek Famine of 1941-1942 provides a natural experiment to test the fetal origins hypothesis. This hypothesis states that exposure to detrimental conditions during the fetal stage leads to worse health and socioeconomic outcomes in adulthood. This chapter first describes the Greek famine's causes. It then reviews the impact of the Greek famine on the education and labor market outcomes of the individuals exposed to the famine in utero or in early childhood. Corroborating Barker's hypothesis, the evidence indicates that the Greek famine significantly reduced educational attainment for those who experienced it before their third year of life. The famine also reduced labor market success for those with famine exposure in their early childhood. This finding is partly driven by a shift towards rural birthplaces in the famine years. The sum of the findings underscores the importance of averting early childhood malnourishment.
- Published
- 2019
27. Introducing the World Bank’s 2018 Health Equity and Financial Protection Indicators Database
- Author
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Adam Wagstaff, Patrick Eozenou, Sven Neelsen, and Marc-Francois Smitz
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The 2018 Health Equity and Financial Protection Indicators Database: Overview and Insights
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Sven Neelsen, Marc-Francois Smitz, Adam Wagstaff, and Patrick Eozenou
- Subjects
Database ,Inpatient care ,Global health ,Equity (finance) ,Business ,Millennium Development Goals ,computer.software_genre ,computer ,Health indicator ,Utilization rate ,Curative care ,Health equity - Abstract
The 2018 database on Health Equity and Financial Protection indicators provides data on equity in the delivery of health service interventions and health outcomes, and on financial protection in health. This paper provides a brief history of the database, gives an overview of the contents of the 2018 version of the database, and then gets into the details of the construction of its two sides -- the health equity side and the financial protection side. The paper also provides illustrative uses of the database, including the extent of and trends in inequity in maternal and child health intervention coverage, the extent of inequities in women's cancer screening and inpatient care utilization, and trends and inequalities in the incidence of catastrophic health expenditures.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Universal coverage with supply-side reform: The impact on medical expenditure risk and utilization in Thailand
- Author
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Phusit Prakongsai, Vuthiphan Vongmongkol, Owen O'Donnell, Sven Neelsen, Supon Limwattananon, Eddy van Doorslaer, Viroj Tangcharoensathien, Health Economics (HE), and Applied Economics
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percentile ,Public economics ,business.industry ,Public health ,Social Welfare ,Universal coverage ,Medical expenditure ,Ambulatory care ,Health care ,Economics ,medicine ,Deadweight loss ,business ,Finance - Abstract
We estimate the impact on out-of-pocket (OOP) medical expenditure of a major reform in Thailand that greatly extended health insurance coverage to achieve universality while implementing supply-side measures intended to deliver cost-effective care from an increased, but modest, public health budget. Difference-in-differences comparison of groups to whom coverage was extended or deepened with those whose coverage did not change indicates that the reform reduced OOP expenditure by 28% on average and by 42% at the 95th percentile of the conditional distribution. Simulations suggest that exposure to medical expenditure risk was reduced by three-fifths, on average, generating a social welfare gain equivalent to 80–200% of the approximate deadweight loss from financing the reform. Estimated effects on health care access suggest that the policy managed to reduce households' medical expenses while also raising their utilization of both inpatient and ambulatory care.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Introducing the World Bank's 2018 Health Equity and Financial Protection Indicators database
- Author
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Patrick Eozenou, Sven Neelsen, Marc-Francois Smitz, and Adam Wagstaff
- Subjects
Health Equity ,United Nations ,business.industry ,050204 development studies ,05 social sciences ,MEDLINE ,Accounting ,General Medicine ,Standard of living ,Global Health ,Health equity ,Child health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Databases as Topic ,0502 economics and business ,Global health ,Humans ,Financial protection ,Maternal health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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31. Long-run effects of fetal influenza exposure: Evidence from Switzerland
- Author
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Sven Neelsen and Thomas Stratmann
- Subjects
Male ,Health (social science) ,Fetal exposure ,Disease Outbreaks ,Cohort Studies ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Pregnancy ,Influenza, Human ,Pandemic ,Humans ,Medicine ,Marriage ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Fetus ,business.industry ,Censuses ,Middle Aged ,Models, Theoretical ,Fetal health ,Influenza pandemic ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical ,Educational attainment ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Cohort ,Educational Status ,Female ,business ,Switzerland ,Regional differences ,Demography - Abstract
In this paper we estimate long-run effects of fetal exposure to the 1918/19 influenza pandemic for a European country. Using data from the 1970 Swiss census, we find that the male 1919 cohort that had a strongly increased likelihood of fetal exposure to the pandemic performs significantly worse in terms of educational attainment and has a lower chance of marriage than the surrounding cohorts. Further, we find similar results when we in addition use regional differences in influenza severity to test for the impact of influenza on later-life outcomes. A set of robustness tests confirm our findings.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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32. Effects of prenatal and early life malnutrition: Evidence from the Greek famine
- Author
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Sven Neelsen and Thomas Stratmann
- Subjects
Adult ,Employment ,Male ,Adverse outcomes ,Rural Health ,Empirical Research ,jel:J24 ,jel:I29 ,famine, health, regression discontinuity, Greece ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prenatal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Aged ,Greece ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Rural health ,Age Factors ,Urban Health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant ,History, 20th Century ,Middle Aged ,jel:I10 ,medicine.disease ,Infant Nutrition Disorders ,Early life ,jel:J13 ,Malnutrition ,jel:I12 ,Starvation ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Regression discontinuity design ,Educational Status ,Famine ,Female ,Rural area ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Demography - Abstract
This paper examines the long run education and labor market effects from early-life exposure to the Greek 1941-42 famine. Given the short duration of the famine, we can separately identify the famine effects for cohorts exposed in utero, during infancy and at one year of age. We find that adverse outcomes due to the famine are largest for infants. Further, in our regression analysis we exploit the fact that the famine was more severe in urban than in rural areas. Consistent with our prediction, we find that urban-born cohorts show larger negative impacts on educational outcomes than the rural-born cohorts.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Electricity usage in micro-enterprises — Evidence from Lake Victoria, Uganda
- Author
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Jörg Peters and Sven Neelsen
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Distribution (economics) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Investment decisions ,Promotion (rank) ,Electrification ,Economics ,Remuneration ,Rural electrification ,Rural area ,business ,Nexus (standard) ,Industrial organization ,media_common - Abstract
This paper aims to shed light on the nexus of electricity, firm performance, and economic development in a dynamic rural area in Southern Uganda. Using quantitative firm-level data on 200 micro-enterprises complemented by qualitative case studies we find that modern energy increases the importance of electricity-using capital and alters the sectoral distribution of economic activities. By contrast, we find no evidence for an expansionary effect of electrification on firm profits or worker remuneration. In fact, many entrepreneurs consider the direct gain from connecting to the grid to be small. Qualitative information, however, suggests that a positive indirect impact of electrification on firm performance is induced by the overall expansive effect electrification has on local demand. The demand increase can be partly assigned to people moving into the electrified community from surrounding non-electrified areas. We conclude that if productive energy promotion policies are put in place they should address drawing up thorough business plans to enable local entrepreneurs to take informed connection and investment decisions.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Obamacare â€' Hoffnung auf eine Reform des amerikanischen Gesundheitssystems?
- Author
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Sven Neelsen and Michael Metzger
- Subjects
jel:I18 ,Gesundheitswesen, Gesetzliche Krankenversicherung, Gesundheitsreform, Vereinigte Staaten - Abstract
Der Umbau des US-amerikanischen Gesundheitssystems ist eines der Vorhaben der gegenwärtigen US-Regierung. Der folgende Beitrag stellt die Organisation und die Leistungsfähigkeit des derzeitigen Gesundheitswesens vor und diskutiert die aktuellen Reformvorschläge.
- Published
- 2009
35. Progressive Universalism? The Impact of Targeted Coverage on Healthcare Access and Expenditures in Peru
- Author
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Sven Neelsen and Owen O'Donnell
- Subjects
Receipt ,Inpatient care ,Ambulatory care ,Inequality ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Health care ,Distribution (economics) ,Demographic economics ,Business ,Entitlement ,Quarter (United States coin) ,media_common - Abstract
Like other countries seeking a progressive path to universalism, Peru has attempted to reduce inequalities in access to healthcare by granting the poor entitlement to tax-financed basic care without charge. We identify the impact of this policy by comparing the target population’s change in healthcare utilization with that of poor adults already covered through employment-based insurance. There are positive effects on receipt of ambulatory care and medication that are largest among the elderly and the poorest. The probability of getting formal healthcare when sick is increased by almost two fifths, while the likelihood of being unable to afford treatment is reduced by more than a quarter. Consistent with the shallow cover offered, there is no impact on use of inpatient care. Mean out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditure on healthcare is unaffected but spending is reduced by up to one quarter at some points of the distribution. Among healthcare users, medical spending is reduced across much of the distribution and in relative terms falls most at lower quantiles, which is consistent with limited nominal and effective coverage of expensive treatments.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Economic Impact of Illness With Health Insurance But Without Income Insurance
- Author
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Sven Neelsen, Eddy van Doorslaer, Owen O'Donnell, and Supon Limwattananon
- Subjects
Labour economics ,Informal sector ,Earnings ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,1. No poverty ,Entitlement ,3. Good health ,Social insurance ,Goods and services ,jel:I13 ,jel:O12 ,Health, medical expenditure, social insurance, universal coverage, Thailand ,0502 economics and business ,8. Economic growth ,Health care ,Economic impact analysis ,050207 economics ,business ,Income protection insurance ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
We examine economic vulnerability to illness when, as for informal sector workers in Thailand, there is universal coverage for health care but earnings losses are uninsured. Even with comprehensive health care entitlement, severe illness that strikes an initially healthy worker is found to raise out-of-pocket medical expenses by around two thirds and increase the probability that medical spending absorbs more than a tenth of the household budget by nine percentage points. Moreover, severe illness reduces the probability of remaining in employment by 18 points and precipitates a reduction in household labor income of almost one third. Despite the rise in medical expenses and fall in earnings, households are able to maintain expenditure on goods and services other than medical care by drawing on remittances and informal transfers, cutting back on saving, and by borrowing. In the short term, informal insurance fills gaps left uncovered by formal insurance but there is likely to be substantial exposure to economic risks associated with long-term illness.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Universal Coverage on a Budget: Impacts on Health Care Utilization and Out-Of-Pocket Expenditures in Thailand
- Author
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Supon Limwattananon, Vuthiphan Vongmongkol, Owen O'Donnell, Sven Neelsen, Phusit Prakongsai, Viroj Tangcharoensathien, and Eddy van Doorslaer
- Subjects
Population ,Distribution (economics) ,jel:H42 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ambulatory care ,Environmental health ,0502 economics and business ,Health care ,Health insurance ,Medicine ,050207 economics ,education ,education.field_of_study ,050208 finance ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,05 social sciences ,Public sector ,1. No poverty ,jel:H51 ,health insurance, health care, medical expenditures, universal coverage, Thailand ,Universal coverage ,jel:I18 ,Public hospital ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
We estimate the impact on health care utilization and out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditures of a major reform in Thailand that extended health insurance to one-quarter of the population to achieve universal coverage while keeping health spending below 4% of GDP. Identification is through comparison of changes in outcomes of groups to whom coverage was extended with those of public sector employees and their dependents whose coverage was not affected. The reform is estimated to have reduced the probability that a sick person goes without formal treatment by 3.2 percentage points (11%). It increased the probability of receiving public ambulatory care by 2.7 ppt (5%) and of admission to a public hospital by 1 ppt (18%). OOP expenditures were reduced by one-third on average, as was the probability of spending more than 10% of the household budget on health care, while spending at the very top of the OOP distribution was reduced by one-half representing substantial reductions in exposure to medical expenditure risk. Supply-side measures implemented with the coverage extension are likely to have helped realize these effects from an increased, but still very tight, budget.
- Published
- 2013
38. The Relationship between Abortion Liberalization and Sexual Behavior: International Evidence
- Author
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Thomas Stratmann, Jonathan Klick, Sven Neelsen, Law and Economics, and Health Economics (HE)
- Subjects
Marginal cost ,Liberalization ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Gonorrhea ,Abortion ,Affect (psychology) ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Birth rate ,Sexual behavior ,embryonic structures ,Development economics ,medicine ,Psychology ,Law ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,health care economics and organizations ,Finance ,Demography - Abstract
Economic theory predicts that abortion laws affect sexual behavior since they change the marginal cost of having risky sex. We estimate the impact of abortion laws on sexual behavior by reported gonorrhea incidence. Our data panel includes 41 countries for which consistent gonorrhea data are available for 1980--2000. Compared with laws permitting abortion only to save the pregnant woman's life or her physical health, the switch to more liberal abortion laws is associated with large increases in reported gonorrhea incidence. Our results help explain why birth rates do not decline at the same rate abortions increase when laws are liberalized. Copyright 2012, Oxford University Press.
- Published
- 2012
39. Early-Life Famine Exposure and Later-Life Outcomes: Evidence from Survivors of the Greek Famine
- Author
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Markus Stratmann and Sven Neelsen
- Subjects
Secondary level ,education.field_of_study ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Fertility ,Early life ,Geography ,Cohort effect ,Cohort ,Famine ,education ,Short duration ,media_common ,Demography - Abstract
This chapter examines education and labor market outcomes for cohorts with early-life exposure to the Greek 1941-42 famine. Given the short duration of the famine, we can separately identify effects for cohorts exposed as fetuses, infants and one-year-olds. Our empirical analysis uses data from the 1971, 1981, 1991, and 2001 Greek National Population Housing Censuses. For our main specification that includes birthplace controls, we find negative cohort effects on the likelihood of completing upper secondary school for the cohorts exposed as infants and one-year-olds. Because the famine was more severe in urban areas, we also estimate separate models for urban- and rural-born individuals. Consistent with our prediction, the negative cohort effects for the early-life famine exposed cohorts are larger in the urban-born subsample. The negative cohort effects increase in specifications without birthplace controls. We attribute a part of this increase to a rising share of individuals from areas with negative education and labor market prospects in the cohorts with early-life famine exposure. The cohort effect difference between specifications with and without birthplace controls is largest for the 1942 cohort, a large part of which was conceived during the famine. We suggest that this finding is due to the fact that negative birthplace selection into this cohort occurred not only through famine mortality, like in the other cohorts with early-life exposure, but also through famine-related falls in fertility.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Long-Run Effects of Prenatal Influenza-Exposure: Evidence from Switzerland
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Sven Neelsen and Thomas Stratmann
- Subjects
business.industry ,Cohort ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,business ,Prenatal exposure ,Educational attainment ,Regional differences ,Demography - Abstract
In this paper we estimate the long-run effects of prenatal exposure to the 1918/19 influenza wave for a European country. Using data from the 1970 Swiss census and comparing cohort outcomes, we find that the male Swiss-born cohort with in utero exposure to the pandemic performs significantly worse in terms of educational attainment and has a lower chance of marriage than the surrounding cohorts. Further, we find similar results when we in addition use regional differences in influenza severity to test for the impact of influenza on later in life outcomes. Finally, a set of robustness tests confirm our findings.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Germany's Struggle with Prices for Patent-protected Drugs
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Mathias Kifmann and Sven Neelsen
- Subjects
jel:L65 ,I18 ,Staatliche Preispolitik ,jel:I18 ,I11 ,L65 ,ddc:330 ,Pharmazeutisches Produkt ,Patentrecht ,Wirkungsanalyse ,Deutschland ,jel:I11 - Published
- 2010
42. Effects of Prenatal and Early Life Malnutrition: Evidence from the Greek Famine
- Author
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Thomas Stratmann and Sven Neelsen
- Subjects
Malnutrition ,Geography ,Adverse outcomes ,medicine ,Regression discontinuity design ,Famine ,Regression analysis ,Rural area ,medicine.disease ,Short duration ,Early life ,Demography - Abstract
This paper examines the long run education and labor market effects from early-life exposure to the Greek 1941-42 famine. Given the short duration of the famine, we can separately identify the famine effects for cohorts exposed in utero, during infancy and at one year of age. We find that adverse outcomes due to the famine are largest for infants. Further, in our regression analysis we exploit the fact that the famine was more severe in urban than in rural areas. Consistent with our prediction, we find that urban-born cohorts show larger negative impacts on educational outcomes than the rural-born cohorts.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Effect of Abortion Liberalization on Sexual Behavior: International Evidence
- Author
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Jonathan Klick, Sven Neelsen, and Thomas Stratmann
- Subjects
jel:J13 ,jel:Z13 ,jel:I12 ,jel:K32 ,jel:K00 ,jel:I18 ,embryonic structures ,Gonorrhea, pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases, abortion laws ,health care economics and organizations ,reproductive and urinary physiology - Abstract
Most industrialized countries have increased access to abortion over the past 30 years. Economic theory predicts that abortion laws affect sexual behavior since they change the marginal cost of having risky sex. We use gonorrhea incidence as a metric of risky sexual behavior. Using a panel of 41 North American, European and Central Asian countries over the period 1980-2000, we estimate the impact of abortion law reform on risky sex. Compared to the most restrictive legislation that permits abortion only to save the pregnant woman’s life or her physical health, more liberal abortion laws are associated with at least thirty additional gonorrhea cases per 100,000 individuals. The marginal effect of laws which make abortion available on request is larger than the effect of laws which allow abortion on socioeconomic and mental health grounds. Our results are robust against a set of alternative sample constructions and model specifications.
- Published
- 2009
44. The Effect of Abortion Liberalization on Sexual Behavior: International Evidence
- Author
-
Sven Neelsen, Thomas Stratmann, and Jonathan Klick
- Subjects
Marginal cost ,Actuarial science ,Gonorrhea ,Legislation ,Abortion ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Abortion law ,Political science ,embryonic structures ,medicine ,Demographic economics ,Developed country ,Socioeconomic status ,health care economics and organizations ,reproductive and urinary physiology - Abstract
Most industrialized countries have increased access to abortion over the past 30 years. Economic theory predicts that abortion laws affect sexual behavior since they change the marginal cost of having risky sex. We use gonorrhea incidence as a metric of risky sexual behavior. Using a panel of 41 North American, European and Central Asian countries over the period 1980-2000, we estimate the impact of abortion law reform on risky sex. Compared to the most restrictive legislation that permits abortion only to save the pregnant woman’s life or her physical health, more liberal abortion laws are associated with at least thirty additional gonorrhea cases per 100,000 individuals. The marginal effect of laws which make abortion available on request is larger than the effect of laws which allow abortion on socioeconomic and mental health grounds. Our results are robust against a set of alternative sample constructions and model specifications.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Erratum to 'Effects of prenatal and early life malnutrition: Evidence from the Greek famine' [J. Health Econ. 30 (2011) 479–488]
- Author
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Thomas Stratmann and Sven Neelsen
- Subjects
Malnutrition ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine ,Famine ,medicine.disease ,business ,Early life ,Demography - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Three Empirical Essays on the Long-Run Consequences of Early-Life Living Conditions
- Author
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Sven Neelsen
- Subjects
jel:J13 ,jel:J24 ,jel:I15 ,jel:I12 ,In utero, early childhood development, long-run effects, malnutrition, influenza, midwife, education, cognitive skill, human capital, labor market, Greece, Switzerland, Indonesia ,jel:I18 ,jel:I21 ,jel:I00 ,jel:H43 - Abstract
This study was prepared by Sven Neelsen while he was working with the ifo Institute for Economic Research. It was completed in December 2011 and accepted as a doctoral thesis by the Department of Economics at the University of Munich in May 2012. The study investigates long-run effects of early-life living conditions using micro-datasets from three countries. The employed empirical strategies aim to identify causal relationships between early-life living conditions and the outcomes of interest.
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