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No. 112, Child mortality in India: Individual
and community effects of women's education and autonomy by Øystein
Kravdal. March 2003. 52 pp. East-West Center Working Papers, Population
Series, No. 111. February 2003. 26 pp.
Abstract
- When assessing health benefits of increased education in developing
countries, many researchers have been concerned about the omission of
important determinants of education from the models. This study illustrates
that one should also be concerned about the limitations of the individual-level
perspective.
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- According to a model based on NFHS II data, the average education
among women (but not men) in the census enumeration area has a strong
impact on child mortality, net of the mother's own education. The relatively
low child mortality associated with women's autonomy explains some of
this community education effect. In addition, it operates partly through
health knowledge, reproductive behavior and more proximate determinants
of mortality, such as the use of maternity and other preventive health
services, the child's nutrition, and the mother's care for a sick child.
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