Are Self Reported Morbidities Deceptive in Measuring Socio-Economic Inequalities

Posted: 4 Aug 2013

See all articles by Srinivas Goli

Srinivas Goli

International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS)

Date Written: June 1, 2011

Abstract

Background & objectives: The ambiguity and variability in existing literature on the magnitude of socio-economic inequality in self-reported morbidities makes it difficult to set priorities in health policy. This study examined three critical research questions: first, how far self-reporting affects measuring socio-economic inequalities in case of obstetric morbidities. Second, does using simple bivariate variations mislead in estimating socio-economic differentials in prevalence of obstetric morbidities? Finally, whether use of sophisticated regression based decomposition results can overcome such problems.

Methods: The data from National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3; 2005-06) were used, and analyzed by statistical tools such as bivariate estimates and regression based decomposition analysis.

Results: Bivariate results revealed that self-reported obstetric morbidity data were misleading in measurement of socio-economic differentials, as these failed to show existing socio-economic variations in obstetric morbidities by socio-economic standing of women. However, decomposition analysis showed that the prevalence of obstetric complications was greater among socioeconomically disadvantaged groups.

Interpretation & conclusions: Based on our findings on measurement of socio-economic inequality in self-reported obstetric morbidity, we conclude that the use of regression based inequality decomposition estimates not only overcomes the problems of measuring socio-economic inequality based on self-reported morbidities, but also increases the validity of such measures.

Keywords: Decomposition analysis, EAG states, India, obstetric morbidity, self-reporting morbidities, socio-economic inequality

Suggested Citation

Goli, Srinivas, Are Self Reported Morbidities Deceptive in Measuring Socio-Economic Inequalities (June 1, 2011). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2305284

Srinivas Goli (Contact Author)

International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS) ( email )

Department of Fertility and Social Demography
International Institute for Population Sciences (I
Mumbai, ME Delhi 400088
India
07042181232 (Phone)
110067 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.srinivasgoli.com/

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Abstract Views
344
PlumX Metrics