DETERMINING MALARIA EFFECTS IN RURAL COLOMBIA

被引:23
|
作者
BONILLA, E
RODRIGUEZ, A
机构
[1] CEDE-Facultad de Economia, Universidad de los Andes, Bogota
[2] Malaria Eradication Service, Department of Health
关键词
MALARIA; ECONOMIC IMPACT; LABOR LOST; WOMEN;
D O I
10.1016/0277-9536(93)90249-4
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Good health is an integral component of the quality of human life, a prerequisite for developing human potential and an important determinant of economic development. When a person is ill from a tropical disease in an agricultural economy, a complex interaction between the individual's welfare and the family's welfare is set in motion. So complex are these interactions that few empirical studies exist on this subject and even where they do, empirical quantification of these interactions and economic losses places the analyst in the minefield of valuing time, ability and contribution to economic welfare. Placing monetary values on these commodities is always a little unsatisfactory since dollar values do not adequately reflect the nature of the losses. Secondly, the ill person's struggle to minimize the economic effects of disease on family income will mask its true impact; thirdly, tropical diseases disproportionately affect low-income groups and therefore measuring the income effects of disease amongst these groups will only reach at the earnings effect, and underestimate the economic implications of tropical disease control. Despite these difficulties, quantification of the economic impact of disease is important from a public health point of view. This study is an attempt at such a task, and focuses on the intra-familial struggle to minimize economic losses due to malaria. Using a case-control approach, time-losses and labour reallocations within the household are examined in an attempt to understand the economic consequences of the disease. One conclusion is that there is no symmetry between the disease burden and the economic burden; in this study the disease burden was greatest amongst males, but the economic impact of this burden was greatest amongst females who postponed or carried out their own activities in addition to caring for the sick and replacing them in farm production.
引用
收藏
页码:1109 / 1114
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] 50 YEARS OBSERVATIONS OF RURAL MALARIA IN EASTERN COLOMBIA
    RENJIFO, S
    DEZULUETA, J
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 1952, 1 (04): : 598 - 611
  • [2] Economic analysis of implementation of some control strategies for rural and urban malaria in Tumaco (Colombia)
    Romero-Leiton, Jhoana P.
    Lbarguen Mondragon, Eduardo
    [J]. LOGOS CIENCIA & TECNOLOGIA, 2018, 10 (02): : 76 - 89
  • [3] Effects of weather shocks on multidimensional rural poverty: evidence for Colombia
    Perez-Uribe, Miguel A.
    Palacios, Paola
    [J]. CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT, 2024,
  • [4] STRATEGIES FOR MALARIA CONTROL IN COLOMBIA
    ROJAS, W
    PENARANDA, F
    ECHAVARRIA, M
    [J]. PARASITOLOGY TODAY, 1992, 8 (04): : 141 - 144
  • [5] Epidemiology and control of malaria in Colombia
    Padilla Rodriguez, Julio Cesar
    Alvarez Uribe, Gilberto
    Montoya Araujo, Roberto
    Chaparro Narvaez, Pablo
    Herrera Valencia, Socrates
    [J]. MEMORIAS DO INSTITUTO OSWALDO CRUZ, 2011, 106 : 114 - 122
  • [6] Status of urban malaria in Colombia
    Ochoa, Johanna
    Osorio, Lyda
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 2006, 75 (05): : 60 - 60
  • [7] Congenital malaria in Uraba, Colombia
    Pineros-Jimenez, Juan G.
    Alvarez, Gonzalo
    Tobon, Alberto
    Arboleda, Margarita
    Carrero, Sonia
    Blair, Silvia
    [J]. MALARIA JOURNAL, 2011, 10
  • [8] Congenital malaria in Urabá, Colombia
    Juan G Piñeros-Jiménez
    Gonzalo Álvarez
    Alberto Tobón
    Margarita Arboleda
    Sonia Carrero
    Silvia Blair
    [J]. Malaria Journal, 10
  • [9] Rural surgeon in Colombia
    Gutierrez, Jaime
    [J]. WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2006, 30 (09) : 1636 - 1637
  • [10] Rural Surgeon in Colombia
    Jaime Gutiérrez
    [J]. World Journal of Surgery, 2006, 30 : 1636 - 1637