Does health intervention improve socioeconomic inequalities of neonatal, infant and child mortality? Evidence from Matlab, Bangladesh
Date
2007-06-05
Authors
Razzaque, Abdur
Streatfield, Peter Kim
Gwatkin, Dave
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BioMed Central
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although there are wide variations in mortality between developed and developing
countries, socioeconomic inequalities in health exist in both the societies. The study examined
socioeconomic inequalities of neonatal, infant and child mortality using data from the Matlab Health
and Demographic Surveillance System of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research,
Bangladesh (ICDDR,B).
METHODS: Four birth cohorts (1983–85, 1988–90, 1993–95, 1998–00) were followed for five years
for death and out-migration in two adjacent areas (ICDDR,B-service and government-service) with
similar socioeconomic but differ health services. Based on asset quintiles, inequality was measured
through both poor-rich ratio and concentration index.
RESULTS: The study found that the socioeconomic inequalities of neonatal, infant and under-five
mortality increased over time in both the ICDDR,B-service and government-service areas but it
declined substantially for 1–4 years in the ICDDR,B- service area.
CONCLUSION: The study concluded that usual health intervention programs (non-targeted) do not
reduce poor-rich gap, rather the gap increases initially but might decrease in long run if the program
is very intensive.
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Keywords
Keywords: article; Bangladesh; birth rate; child; childhood mortality; developing country; economic aspect; female; geographic distribution; government; health care access; health program; human; infant; infant mortality; life table; major clinical study; male; mig
Citation
International Journal for Equity in Health 6.4 (2007)
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International Journal for Equity in Health
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Journal article
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