Home » Countries » Ethiopia » Child Poverty Analysis for Ethiopia (Multidimensional Child Poverty Analysis using 2019 Mini DHS )
Child Poverty Analysis for Ethiopia [message #23589] |
Sat, 16 October 2021 10:44 |
asifawuhabitamu5@gmail.co
Messages: 3 Registered: October 2021
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Dear Sir/Madam,
I am working on Multidimensional Child Poverty Analysis using 2019 Mini DHS of Ethiopia. The methodology I planned to follow is Alkir-Foster Method to analysis the level of child multidimensional poverty in the country. In the study I have many dimensions such as: Development/stunting, Nutrition, Health, Water, Sanitation, and Housing for child under age 5 and Education, Health related knowledge, Information and participation, Water, Sanitation, and Housing for children between age 5 to 17. Within each dimension I have indicators. Thus, the variables I am going to use are many. In this regard, my inquire is, please may you show me how to marge all data sets to a single data set? Thank You in Advance.
With Regards,
HTLM
[Updated on: Sat, 16 October 2021 10:45] Report message to a moderator
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Re: Child Poverty Analysis for Ethiopia [message #23616 is a reply to message #23602] |
Thu, 21 October 2021 02:51 |
asifawuhabitamu5@gmail.co
Messages: 3 Registered: October 2021
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Member |
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Dear Sir/Madam,
Thank you for your help. I followed your suggestion and fixed some of my problems. But, since my indicators are many, I need additional help from your side. I have individual, household, household member as well as birth related variables; that looks for merging not PR and KR files, but also BR, FW, HR, and IR. Please may you help me in doing so? FYI, I have listed below the dimensions and indicators I work with. Thank You in advance.
Dimensions and Indicators
Development (stunting)
• Stunting: child's height-for-age is below -2SD from reference population.
Health
• Skilled birth assistance: unskilled birth attendance.
• Adequacy of ANC services: mother had less than 4 ANC visits during pregnancy or 4+ ANC visits were performed by an unskilled health professional.
• Vaccination: incomplete vaccination.
• Mother's knowledge on ORS for treatment of diarrhoea: mother does not have knowledge.
Nutrition
• Exclusive breastfeeding: child is not exclusively breastfed.
• Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) practices: child is not fed a Minimum Acceptable Diet (MAD).
• Wasting: child's weight-for-height is below -2SD from the reference population.
• Underweight: child's weight-for-age is below -2SD from the reference population.
• Vitamin A supplement: child has not received a vitamin A supplement during the last 6 months.
Education
• School attendance: child is not attending school.
• Grade-for-age: child of primary school age (9-14 years) is attending school with two or more years of delay; child of secondary school age (15-17 years) is attending school with three or more years of delay.
• Illiteracy: child cannot read a full sentence.
Health-related knowledge
• Knowledge on diarrhoea treatment: child lives in a household where no adolescent or adult female knows about ORS for treatment of diarrhea.
• Knowledge about HIV/AIDS: child age 5-14 years lives in a household where none of the adolescent or adult members has knowledge about HIV/AIDS transmission and prevention; child age 15-17 years does not have knowledge on HIV/AIDS transmission and prevention.
Information and participation
• Information devices: no information device (TV, radio, phone or mobile phone) available in the household.
• Participation in community events or conversations: child age 5-14 years lives in a household in which none of the adolescent or adult family members have heard any family planning messages in the last few months through participation in community events or conversations; child age 15-17 years has not heard about family planning messages in the last few months through participation in community events or conversations.
Water
• Water source: household uses an unimproved water source.
• Distance to water: the water source is located more than 30 minutes away than is necessary to fetch water and return to the dwelling.
Sanitation
• Toilet type: household has access to an unimproved toilet type.
Housing
• Housing material: Floor, exterior walls or roof of the dwelling where the child resides are made of natural, non-permanent material.
• Indoor pollution: child is exposed to indoor pollution from usage of solid cooking fuels for cooking inside the house with no separate kitchen.
HTLM
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Re: Child Poverty Analysis for Ethiopia [message #23664 is a reply to message #23617] |
Fri, 29 October 2021 01:48 |
asifawuhabitamu5@gmail.co
Messages: 3 Registered: October 2021
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Member |
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Thank You Dear. The information provided is very helpful and I managed following your suggestion. Thank You again.
Additional inquire: I have indicators about household knowledge of ORS usage for treating diarrhoea and Household/individual knowledge about HIV/AIDS. The full information about the indicators are the following:
1. Household knowledge about ORS for treating diarrhoea: child aged 5-14 years lives in a household where none of the women members (ages 15-49) have used ORS for treating diarrhoea or know that ORS can be used for treating diarrhoea.
2. Household/individual knowledge about HIV/AIDS: child aged 5-14 years is deprived if none of the household members has knowledge about HIV/AIDS transmission and prevention; whereas a child aged 15-17 is deprived if she/he does not have knowledge on HIV/AIDS transmission and prevention. When individual information is not available, information from adult household members is imputed. The child is deprived if she/he or none of household members: i. Has never heard about HIV/AIDS; ii. Does not know that HIV/AIDS transmission can be prevented by having sex with one partner who has no other partners or by always using condoms during sex; iii. Does not reject any of the two most common misconceptions about HIV/AIDS transmission that HIV can be spread by mosquito bites or by sharing food with an HIV-infected person; or iv. If one thinks that or doesn't know that a healthy-looking person can have HIV.
Please may you suggest the variables form DHS dataset to be used while dealing with the above indicators? Thank You in advance.
HTLM
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Re: Child Poverty Analysis for Ethiopia [message #23672 is a reply to message #23664] |
Fri, 29 October 2021 16:11 |
Bridgette-DHS
Messages: 3199 Registered: February 2013
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Senior Member |
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Following is a response from DHS Research & Data Analysis Director, Tom Pullum:
I need some clarification. Did you define these indicators yourself, or are you working with definitions from some other source? If from some other source, can you give a link or reference? Are you asking for Stata code to construct these indicators?
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