The impact of early-life access to oral polio vaccines on disability: evidence from India

被引:1
作者
Ambade, Mayanka [1 ]
Menon, Nidhiya [2 ,3 ]
Subramanian, S. V. [4 ]
机构
[1] Indian Inst Technol, Mandi 175005, Himachal Prades, India
[2] Brandeis Univ, Dept Econ, Waltham, MA 02453 USA
[3] Brandeis Univ, Int Business Sch, Waltham, MA 02453 USA
[4] Harvard T H Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social & Behav Sci, Boston, MA 02115 USA
关键词
Polio; Locomotor; Disability; Acute flaccid paralysis; Oral polio vaccines; Early-life; Childhood; Difference-in-differences with multiple time period models; I15; I12; I18; O12; J13; J14; IN-UTERO; POLIOMYELITIS; DISEASE; IMMUNIZATION; ERADICATION; EDUCATION; EXPOSURE; DEATH; WATER;
D O I
10.1007/s00148-024-01006-x
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
We evaluate the impact of oral polio vaccines on the incidence of all disabilities (locomotor, hearing, visual, speech, and mental) in India, focusing on polio-related disability, which constitutes the largest fraction of locomotor disabilities. Polio was hyperendemic in India even as recently as the early 1990s, but the country was declared wild polio virus-free in 2014. Intent-to-treat effects from difference-in-differences with multiple time period models that condition on demographic and socio-economic characteristics reveal that access to oral polio vaccines in the year of birth reduced the incidence of any disability, locomotor disability, and polio-related disability by 20.5%, 11.6%, and 7.2%, respectively, signaling substantial gains. Impacts on any disability underline that polio vaccines had positive spillover effects on other disability categories as well. The eradication of polio in India, while relatively late, brought significant health benefits and is a notable health economics success story in a developing context.
引用
收藏
页数:25
相关论文
共 51 条
[21]   Childhood health shocks, comparative advantage, and long-term outcomes: Evidence from the last Danish polio epidemic [J].
Gensowski, Miriam ;
Nielsen, Torben Heien ;
Nielsen, Nete Munk ;
Rossin-Slater, Maya ;
Wust, Miriam .
JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2019, 66 :27-36
[22]  
Goldring Thomas., 2019, ddtiming: Stata module to perform a Goodman-Bacon decomposition of difference-in-differences estimation
[23]   Difference-in-differences with variation in treatment timing [J].
Goodman-Bacon, Andrew .
JOURNAL OF ECONOMETRICS, 2021, 225 (02) :254-277
[24]  
Government of India, 2016, India - persons aged 60 plus survey: NSS 42 nd round schedule 27 (1986-87)
[25]   Protecting infants from natural disasters: The case of vitamin A supplementation and a tornado in Bangladesh [J].
Gunnsteinsson, Snaebjorn ;
Molina, Teresa ;
Adhvaryu, Achyuta ;
Christian, Parul ;
Labrique, Alain ;
Sugimoto, Jonathan ;
Shamim, Abu Ahmed ;
West, Keith P. .
JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2022, 158
[26]   Socioeconomic inequalities in child vaccination in low/middle-income countries: what accounts for the differences? [J].
Hajizadeh, Mohammad .
JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, 2018, 72 (08) :719-725
[27]   PREVENTING THE WHITE DEATH: TUBERCULOSIS DISPENSARIES [J].
Hansen, Casper Worm ;
Jensen, Peter Sandholt ;
Madsen, Peter Egedeso .
ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 2020, 130 (629) :1288-1316
[28]   Vaccination and risky behaviors: evidence from the hepatitis B vaccination campaign in China [J].
Huang, Chen ;
Li, Cong ;
Liu, Feng ;
Xu, Ruofei .
JOURNAL OF POPULATION ECONOMICS, 2023, 36 (04) :2549-2580
[29]   Characterization of immunization secondary analyses using demographic and health surveys (DHS) and multiple indicator cluster surveys (MICS), 2006-2018 [J].
Huang, Yue ;
Danovaro-Holliday, M. Carolina .
BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 21 (01)
[30]  
John T J, 1981, Indian Pediatr, V18, P513