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    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (1 online resource (44 p.))
    Edition: Online-Ausg. World Bank E-Library Archive
    Parallel Title: Ainsworth, Martha The Impact of Adult Deaths on Children's Health in Northwestern Tanzania
    Keywords: Aged ; Breastfeeding ; Children ; Clinics ; Death ; Health ; Health Care ; Health Interventions ; Health Monitoring and Evaluation ; Health Outcomes ; Health, Nutrition and Population ; Immunization ; Intervention ; Morbidity ; Mortality ; Nutrition ; Nutritional Status ; Patient ; Pregnant Women ; Prevention ; Social Support ; Weight ; Aged ; Breastfeeding ; Children ; Clinics ; Death ; Health ; Health Care ; Health Interventions ; Health Monitoring and Evaluation ; Health Outcomes ; Health, Nutrition and Population ; Immunization ; Intervention ; Morbidity ; Mortality ; Nutrition ; Nutritional Status ; Patient ; Pregnant Women ; Prevention ; Social Support ; Weight ; Aged ; Breastfeeding ; Children ; Clinics ; Death ; Health ; Health Care ; Health Interventions ; Health Monitoring and Evaluation ; Health Outcomes ; Health, Nutrition and Population ; Immunization ; Intervention ; Morbidity ; Mortality ; Nutrition ; Nutritional Status ; Patient ; Pregnant Women ; Prevention ; Social Support ; Weight
    Abstract: January 2000 - In Tanzania, a poor country experiencing a severe AIDS epidemic, the children whose health is hit hardest by the death of a parent or other adult are those in the poorest households, those with uneducated parents, and those with the least access to health care. Three important health interventions mitigate the impact of adult deaths: immunization against measles, oral rehydration salts, and access to health care. The AIDS epidemic is dramatically increasing mortality of adults in many Sub-Saharan African countries, with potentially severe consequences for surviving family members. Until now, most of these impacts had not been quantified. Ainsworth and Semali examine the impact of adult mortality in Tanzania on three measures of health among children under five: morbidity, height for age, and weight for height. The children hit hardest by the death of a parent or other adult are those in the poorest households, those with uneducated parents, and those with the least access to health care. Ainsworth and Semali also show how much three important health interventions - immunization against measles, oral rehydration salts, and access to health care - can do to mitigate the impact of adult mortality. These programs disproportionately improve health outcomes among the poorest children and, within that group, among children affected by adult mortality. In Tanzania there is so much poverty and child health indicators are so low that these interventions should be targeted as much as possible to the poorest households, where the children hit hardest by adult mortality are most likely to be found. (Conceivably, the targeting strategy for middle-income countries with severe AIDS epidemics, such as Thailand, or countries with less poverty and better child health indicators might be different.) This paper - a product of Poverty and Human Resources, Development Research Group - is part of a larger research project on The Economic Impact of Fatal Adult Illness due to AIDS and Other Causes in Sub-Saharan Africa (RPO 675-71). The study was funded by the Bank's Research Support Budget. The authors may be contacted at mainsworthworldbank.org or isemali@muchs.ac.tz
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