Does Distance Matter for Institutional Delivery in Rural India?
In this paper, we examine if access to health facilities improves institutional birth delivery in a resource-constrained country like India. Using a household- and village-level health survey, we find that women living closer to health facilities have a higher probability of in-facility births. A one kilometer increase in the distance to the nearest health facility decreases the probability of institutional delivery by 0.8%. This result does not change significantly even after we account for endogenous placement of health facilities. The results of Two-Stage Residual Inclusion (2SRI) and IV-Probit models suggest that an additional travel of one kilometer decreases probability of in-facility delivery (IFD) by 4.4%. The policy simulation result suggest that, the mean probability of in-facility delivery increases when the density of health facility is increased. Overall, results suggest that geographic distance is an important barrier to service utilization and improving access to health facilities may be an important policy instrument to improve utilization of health services in resource-poor countries.
Year of publication: |
2014-03
|
---|---|
Authors: | Kumar, Santosh ; Dansereau, Emily ; Murray, Chris |
Institutions: | Department of Economics and International Business, College of Business Administration |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Supply-Side Barriers to Maternity-Care Provision in India: A Facility-Based Analysis
Kumar, Santosh, (2014)
-
Does Distance matter for Institutional Delivery in Rural India? An Instrumental Variable Approach
Kumar, Santosh, (2012)
-
Children of Drought: Rainfall Shocks and Early Child Health in Rural India
Kumar, Santosh, (2014)
- More ...