Child health care demand in a developing country: unconditional estimates from the Philippines

This study examines how quality, price, and access to curative health care influence use of modern public, modern private, and traditional providers among 3,000 children age 0-2 years in Cebu, Philippines. The analysis relies on a series of household, community, and health facility surveys conducted...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Hallman, Kelly
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161282
_version_ 1855540263694368768
author Hallman, Kelly
author_browse Hallman, Kelly
author_facet Hallman, Kelly
author_sort Hallman, Kelly
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study examines how quality, price, and access to curative health care influence use of modern public, modern private, and traditional providers among 3,000 children age 0-2 years in Cebu, Philippines. The analysis relies on a series of household, community, and health facility surveys conducted in 33 rural and urban communities during 1983-1986. The inclusion of data on potential health care users and available providers makes it possible to investigate the impact of the health care environment on demand. Furthermore, since the study is not limited to only those children whose mothers report them as currently ill, it avoids the possible biases caused by using a sample comprised of those who self-report morbidity. Distance to care is important for reducing demand, unlike user fees that show no significant effects on the use of modern public or private services. The availability of oral rehydration therapy and child vaccines, as well as the proportion of doctors to staff, are important for increasing the use of public care, while supplies of intravenous diarrhea treatments raise the demand for private services. Nonmodern practitioners were used more if they had recently attended an nongovernment- or government-sponsored health training session. Parental human capital and household income increase the utilization of private services. Children who are male and younger than 6 months of age are more likely to be taken to private and traditional providers, the two more expensive types of care.
format Artículo preliminar
id CGSpace161282
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1999
publishDateRange 1999
publishDateSort 1999
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1612822025-11-06T07:22:58Z Child health care demand in a developing country: unconditional estimates from the Philippines Hallman, Kelly rural health urban health health services public health gender nutrition This study examines how quality, price, and access to curative health care influence use of modern public, modern private, and traditional providers among 3,000 children age 0-2 years in Cebu, Philippines. The analysis relies on a series of household, community, and health facility surveys conducted in 33 rural and urban communities during 1983-1986. The inclusion of data on potential health care users and available providers makes it possible to investigate the impact of the health care environment on demand. Furthermore, since the study is not limited to only those children whose mothers report them as currently ill, it avoids the possible biases caused by using a sample comprised of those who self-report morbidity. Distance to care is important for reducing demand, unlike user fees that show no significant effects on the use of modern public or private services. The availability of oral rehydration therapy and child vaccines, as well as the proportion of doctors to staff, are important for increasing the use of public care, while supplies of intravenous diarrhea treatments raise the demand for private services. Nonmodern practitioners were used more if they had recently attended an nongovernment- or government-sponsored health training session. Parental human capital and household income increase the utilization of private services. Children who are male and younger than 6 months of age are more likely to be taken to private and traditional providers, the two more expensive types of care. 1999 2024-11-21T09:54:38Z 2024-11-21T09:54:38Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161282 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Hallman, Kelly. 1999. Child health care demand in a developing country;unconditional estimates from the Philippines. FCND Discussion Paper 70. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161282
spellingShingle rural health
urban health
health services
public health
gender
nutrition
Hallman, Kelly
Child health care demand in a developing country: unconditional estimates from the Philippines
title Child health care demand in a developing country: unconditional estimates from the Philippines
title_full Child health care demand in a developing country: unconditional estimates from the Philippines
title_fullStr Child health care demand in a developing country: unconditional estimates from the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Child health care demand in a developing country: unconditional estimates from the Philippines
title_short Child health care demand in a developing country: unconditional estimates from the Philippines
title_sort child health care demand in a developing country unconditional estimates from the philippines
topic rural health
urban health
health services
public health
gender
nutrition
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161282
work_keys_str_mv AT hallmankelly childhealthcaredemandinadevelopingcountryunconditionalestimatesfromthephilippines