The effect of female migration on infant and child survival in Uganda
Authors: Ssengonzi R.1; De Jong G.F.2; Shannon Stokes C.2
Source: Population Research and Policy Review, Volume 21, Number 5, October 2002 , pp. 403-431(29)
Publisher: Springer
Abstract:
This article uses data from the 1996 Uganda Demographic and Health Survey to examine whether migration of women improves the survival chances of their children to age five. We expand on prior research by testing not only the hypothesized positive effect of rural-urban migration, but also the effects of other migration stream behaviours on child survival. Results show that up to 10% of children die before age five and within-group differences in mortality exist among urban and rural children depending on their mother's migration status. Only urban-urban migration was significantly related to child survival, compared to rural non-migrants, after controlling for other factors, although other streams of migration (rural-urban, urban-rural, rural-rural) were positively related to child survival. Generally, migration explains a small component of the variance in child survival. Several other factors, including parents' education, household size, household headship, mother's age at birth, duration of breastfeeding, and place of delivery have a significant predictive power on child survival.
Keywords: Child health; demography; migration; mortality
Language: English
Document Type: Research article
Affiliations: 1: Center for International Development, Research Triangle Institute 2: Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University
Publication date: 2002-10-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Business , Economics
- By this author: Ssengonzi R. ; De Jong G.F. ; Shannon Stokes C.

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