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Child health and the housing environment.

Authors :
Brown, Caitlin
Ravallion, Martin
van de Walle, Dominique
Source :
World Development. Aug2023, Vol. 168, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

• We propose a country-level index, the "housing environment for protection" (HEP) index. • Using DHS data for 41 developing countries, this index combines seven easily-monitored indicators of housing conditions. • Only 8% of households have all identified housing conditions, and only 3% of households in Sub-Saharan Africa. • A poor HEP is associated with worse health outcomes among children, even after controlling for income, poverty, and literacy. • We find that children in the developing world face housing environments that offer only very limited protection from illness. We propose and test an internationally-comparable country-level index of the adequacy of the housing environment for protecting children from ill-health. The housing environment for protection (HEP) index combines seven easily-monitored indicators of housing conditions related to communications, density of occupants, toilet and handwashing facilities, the use of finished construction materials, and cooking facilities. In calibrating and validating the HEP index, the paper uses infant mortality, the incidence of child illnesses and child stunting. We calculate the HEP index for the 41 developing countries with complete recent data from the Demographic and Health Surveys. We find that only 8% of households fully comply with all our identified housing conditions, though there is considerable variation across countries, with full compliance varying from virtually zero to almost 60% of households. A poor HEP is found to be associated with significantly worse health outcomes among children. This finding is robust to adding controls for likely confounders such as income and poverty. Our results suggest that reducing the incidence of ill-health among children is in part achieved by reducing income poverty, but also depends crucially on how much income gains tend to directly improve housing conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0305750X
Volume :
168
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
World Development
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163746729
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2023.106265