亲属关系、种姓与健康:奥里萨高地地区的疾病与治疗

Kinship, Caste, and Health: Illness and Treatment in Upland Orissa

Journal of Development Studies · 2018
被引 1
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

基于奥里萨高地30个村庄279户家庭的面板数据,研究个体与户主的关系及种姓如何影响患病率和治疗方式,发现女性亲属并未更差,而低种姓群体健康状况和治疗机会均较差。

Abstract

This paper investigates whether an individual’s relationship to the head of household and caste are associated with the level of his or her morbidity and, in the event of illness, the treatment received. Surveys of 279 households drawn from 30 villages in a region of upland Orissa were conducted in 2010 and 2013, yielding an unbalanced panel of 1578 individuals, 1077 of whom were present in both years. Whether judged by morbidity as the final outcome or two measures of treatment in the event of sickness, there is no evidence that female kin fared worse than their male counterparts – except in the inherent difference arising from pregnancy. The upcoming generations of children and grandchildren enjoyed better outcomes, regardless of their sex and controlling for age. Members of the Other Backward Caste group enjoyed both better chances of getting treated in a hospital and lower morbidity than their Scheduled Tribe and Scheduled Caste counterparts. Viewed overall, the treatment an individual received depended rather on the characteristics of the family’s village – its topography and its place within the network of health facilities and all-weather roads.

亲属关系种姓发病率治疗方式