Back to Search
OtherOpen Access

Place and Child Health: The Interaction of Population Density and Sanitation in Developing Countries

Author Affiliations
Princeton University, Centre for Development Economics, Global Water Partnership
Year2014
Citations17

Abstract

A long literature in demography debates the importance of place for health. This paper assesses whether the importance of dense settlement for child mortality and child height is moderated by exposure to local sanitation behavior. Is open defecation, without a toilet or latrine, worse for infant mortality and child height where population density is greater? Is poor sanitation an important mechanism by which population density in?uences health outcomes? The paper uses newly assembled data sets to present two complementary analyses, which represent di?erent points in a trade-o? between external and internal validity. The first analysis concentrates on external validity by studying infant mortality and child height in a large, international child-level data set of 172 Demographic and Health Surveys, matched…
View at Publisher

BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.