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Measuring Health Equity in Small Areas - Findings from Demographic Surveillance Systems [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 222 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 18 b&w illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Aug-2005
  • Kirjastus: Ashgate Publishing Limited
  • ISBN-10: 0754644944
  • ISBN-13: 9780754644941
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 222 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 18 b&w illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Aug-2005
  • Kirjastus: Ashgate Publishing Limited
  • ISBN-10: 0754644944
  • ISBN-13: 9780754644941
Teised raamatud teemal:
Over the past decade, several initiatives have been launched to address the major health problems affecting the world's poorest countries, including global efforts to combat HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria. More recently, a millennial challenge has been laid down to root out and confront the links between poverty and health. Using demographic surveillance systems, the INDEPTH researchers aim to contribute both to the empirical knowledge about health equity in developing countries and to report on the application of and innovation in tools and methods. Illustrated with case studies from Africa and Asia, this book puts forward a comprehensive view of the INDEPTH methodologies and findings. It develops and measures concepts and constructs of 'poverty' and 'equity' and relates these to health status. While tools and concepts for measuring health status are more developed, this volume contributes by grappling with new concepts and tools to measure changes in deprivation and disadvantage, adding to this intense theoretical and methodological debate.
Foreword vii
Preface x
Acknowledgements xii
List of Figures xiii
List of Tables xiv
List of Annexes xvii
List of Contributors xviii
1 Epidemiology and the Study of Socio-economic Inequalities in Health
1(18)
Saul S. Morris
2 Socio-economic Status and Health Inequalities in Rural Tanzania: Evidence from the Rufiji Demographic Surveillance System
19(14)
Eleuther Mwageni, Honorati Masanja, Zaharani Juma, Devota Momburi, Yahya Mkilindi, Conrad Mbuya, Harun Kasale, Graham Reid and Don de Savigny
3 Child Health Inequity in Rural Tanzania: Can the National Millennium Development Goals Include the Poorest?
33(12)
Rose Nathan, Joanna Armstrong-Schellenberg, Honorati Masanja, Sosthenes Charles, Oscar Mukasa and Hassan Mshinda
4 Health Inequalities in the Kassena-Nankana District of Northern Ghana
45(22)
Cornelius Debpuur, Peter Wontuo, James Akazili and Philomena Nyarko
5 Socio-economic Status and Child Mortality in a Rural Sub-District of South Africa
67(20)
Kathleen Kahn, Mark Collinson, James Hargreaves, Sam Clark and Stephen Tollman
6 Maternal Vulnerability and Socio-economic Inequalities in Child Mortality in West Africa: An Exploratory Study
87(22)
Morten Sodemann, Amabelia Rodrigues, Jens Nielsen and Peter Aaby
7 Parents' Socio-economic Status and Social Support as Risks for Child Mortality: Consideration of Health Equity in The Gambia
109(18)
Amy Ratcliffe, Kate Halton, Rosalind Coleman, Maimuna Sowe and Gijs Walraven
8 Health and Health Care: Equity Aspects in FilaBavi, Vietnam
127(16)
Nguyen Duy Khe, Pham Huy Dung, Ho Dang Phuc, Hoang Van Minh, Nguyen Xuan Thanh, Bo Eriksson, Vinod Diwan and Nguyen Thi Kim Chuc
9 Does Health Intervention Improve Health Equity? Evidence from Matlab, Bangladesh
143(12)
Abdur Razzaque and Peter Kim Streatfield
10 Socio-economic and Regional Disparity in the Utilization of Reproductive Health Services in Bangladesh 155(14)
Abdullahel Hadi and M. Showkat Gani
11 Development, Validation and Performance of a Rapid Consumption Expenditure Proxy for Measuring Income Poverty in Tanzania: Experience from AMMP Demographic Surveillance Sites 169(16)
Philip Setel, Savitri Abeyasekera, Patrick Ward, Yusuf Hemed, David Whiting, Robert Mswia, and Manos Antoninis for the Adult Morbidity and Mortality Project Team
12 Assessing Economic Inequalities in Health: Contributions of the INDEPTH Health Equity Project 185
Davidson R. Gwatkin


INDEPTH is an international network of field sites which conduct continuous demographic evaluation of populations and their health in developing countries. Each site operates in geographically defined populations, and conducts continuous, longitudinal, demographic monitoring, with timely production of data on all births, deaths, causes of death, and migration. This monitoring system provides a platform for the design and evaluation of a wide range of health care innovations as well as social, economic, behavioural and health interventions and research studies.