Title: HEALTH, NUTRITION AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
1HEALTH, NUTRITION AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
- Aravinda Meera Guntupalli
2Issues
- How health and development are realted to each
other? - Why is health so important?
- Different indicators of health
- Measurement of health and problems associated
with this
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5Health and development
- Health increases human potentialities of all
kinds - Everyone can benefit from better health in the
present, and improved health for the young will
lead to healthier population in the future - Better child health and nutrition promote future
productivity growth directly by helping children
develop into stronger and healthier adults
6Health
- World Health Organization definition of health
Health is a state of complete physical, mental
and social well-being - Health is not simply absence of disease and
infirmity - Health statistics generally measure morbidity
(Sickness) and mortality (Deaths)
7Some common indicators
- Crude death rate
- Life expectancy
- Infant mortality
- Height and weight
- Height for age and weight for age
- Anemia
- Protein Calorie Malnutrition
8Life expectancy at birth by income group, 1990
and 1997
GNP per capita (PPP) 1970 1997
Below 1,000 42 49
1,000-4,000 54 65
4,000-7,000 57 68
7,000-12,000 61 71
Above 12,000 71 74
9Causes of sickness and premature death
- Environmental health problems
- Malnutrition
- Lack of medical care of adequate quantity,
quality and type - These are the causes of sickness and death in
developing countries and they deserve more
careful examination
10Environmental saniation
- Contamination of water supply and some times also
food and soil with human waste - This highlights the fact that many of the
infectious, parasitic, and respiratory diseases
that afflict poor countries are water borne - Housing with insufficient space, ventilation and
access to sunlight - This promotes the spread of airborne diseases
such as tuberculosis
11Access to safe drinking water and
sanitation,1990s (percent of population)
Rural population Safe drinking water Sanitation
Africa 41 81
Asia 74 23
Latin America 41 40
12Malnutrition
- It is a major source of ill health and premature
death in developing countries - Most of the malnutrition today is of the type
known as PCM (Protein Calorie Malnutrition) - Vitamin A deficiency that can cause blindness and
iron deficiency anemia are still very common in
many developing countries
13Anemia
- Anemia is characterized by a low level of
hemoglobin in blood. - Iron deficiency is the most widespread form of
malnutrition in the world, affecting more than
two billion people ( Stolzfus and Dreyfuss,
1998). - In India, anemia affects an estimated 50 percent
of the population (Seshadri, 1998)
14Percentage of malnourished children by income,
1990s
GNP per capita (PPP) Height for age Weight for age
Below 1,000 45 87
1,000-4,000 40 33
4,000-7,000 16 8
7,000-12,000 13 9
Above 12,000 N.A. N.A.
15Height inequality among Indian men (by occupation)
16Height inequality among Indian women (by Caste)
17Quality of care
- Framework of Bruce (1990)
- Choice
- Information to give to clients
- Technical competence of service providers
- Interpersonal relationship
- Mechanism to envelope continuity
- Appropriate constellation of services
18Measurement of health
- Health is different from other measures of human
capital like education - Multidimensional nature of health
- Measurement error problems
- Systematic error that is related to the demand
for health is an imporant issue
19General Health Status
- Self-perceived
- Four or five discrete categories
- Drawbacks
- Small number of discrete categories
- Measurement problem
20Self-reported morbidity, illness and normal
activity
- Information about illness or specific symptoms
during a reference period - Ghanas example
- Another commonly used variant of self-reported
illness is to ask whether any days of normal
activity were lost due to ill health
21Self-reported physical functioning
- Activities of daily living ( ADL)
- ADL captures only physical health problems such
as shortness of breath, joint problems, or back
problems
22Nutrient-based indicators
- Calorie availability is computed by converting
food quantities into nutrient intakes, using
standard composition tables. - This method suffers from systematic bias.
- Wastage
- Leakage
23Cont...
- Availability or consumption??
- 24 hour recall method
- Multiple visits are more expensive but reduces
error
24Nutrition-based Indicators Anthropometrics
- Adult stature can be used as an indicator of
well-being - Height is predetermined by adulthood and weight
provides more current indicator of nutritional
status. - Height and weight ratio is expressed in terms of
BMI
25Cont...
- The relationship between BMI and mortality the so
called Waaler curve is u shaped. - Inexpensive method
- Random error can be reduced by good field
procedures
26Multi dimensionality of health status
- Indonesia family life survey
- The relationship between height and ability to
carry heavy load of those people who reported
their GHS as fair demonstrates three points. - Heterogeneity in both height and functional
limitations even within the group of people in
fair health - Taller people have less difficulties in carrying
heavy load. - Younger adults have less difficulty than older
adults and men have less difficulty than women.
27Current research
- Recent innovations have experimented with
greater reliance on direct observation but the
relation between health and productivity is still
unravelled.
28Other issues
- Nutritional intervention
- Infant and children
- Pregnant and lactating women
- Food subsidies and public distribution system
- Supplying medicines to poor countries
- AIDS drugs prices in Africa
29Important books for health and development
- Human development report
- World development report
- Economics of development Perkins, Radelet et al
- Development economics Debraj Ray
- Economics and development Barbara Ingham
- Handbook of development economics Chenery and
Srinivasan -