Health and wealth in Uzbekistan and sub-Saharan Africa in comparative perspective

被引:12
|
作者
Hohmann, Sophie [2 ,3 ]
Garenne, Michel [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Inst Pasteur, Unite Epidemiol Malad Emergentes, F-75724 Paris 15, France
[2] EHESS, Paris, France
[3] INED, Paris, France
[4] IRD, Paris, France
关键词
Mortality differentials; Inequalities; Vulnerability; Wealth index; Health; Mortality; Child survival; Adult mortality; Nutritional status; Health policy; Uzbekistan; Central Asia; Sub Saharan Africa; MORTALITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.ehb.2010.09.002
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The study investigates the magnitude of differences in child and adult mortality by wealth in Uzbekistan a former soviet country of Central Asia and compares it with similar indicators from sub-Saharan Africa Data were derived from Demographic and Health Surveys An Absolute Wealth Index was built from data on goods owned by households and quality of housing and scaled from 0 to 12 Wealth was distributed evenly in Uzbekistan with a symmetric distribution around a mean of 5 5 modern goods In sub-Saharan Africa on the contrary the wealth distribution had a lower mean (2 5) and was highly skewed towards the left revealing a high proportion of very poor people Adult and child mortality levels were lower in Uzbekistan Despite these major differences the relationships between mortality indicators and the wealth index were similar in the two cases The magnitude of mortality differentials by wealth was of the same order in both cases with gradients ranging from 2 5 to 1 for child mortality and 1 5 to 1 for adult mortality (poorest versus richest) However mortality levels remained lower in Uzbekistan than in sub-Saharan Africa at the same level of wealth for both children and adults A similar relationship was found between nutritional status and wealth index in both cases On the contrary there were no differences by wealth in use of health services and level of education in Uzbekistan whereas wealth gradients were steep for the same variables in sub-Saharan Africa The study suggests that mortality differentials were primarily due to nutritional status and not to access and use of health services or to education The discussion focuses on health and social policies during the colonial and post-colonial period that have produced these patterns (C) 2010 Elsevier B V All rights reserved
引用
收藏
页码:346 / 360
页数:15
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