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Showing papers by "National Autonomous University of Nicaragua published in 1995"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results from this retrospective cohort study of 4434 women show that among the children of women who became literate exclusively by adult education, mortality and risk of malnutrition are significantly lower than among those...
Abstract: Research has consistently demonstrated a strong correlation between women's education and child health, but the absence of data from intervention studies has left open the possibility that this may be due to the confounding effects of wealth or social privilege. Moreover, it is not known what mechanisms mediate the education-health link, nor how it is affected by access to health services. In Nicaragua during the 1980s, thousands of adults became literate through a mass education campaign. This provided a rare opportunity to measure the impact of women's literacy on child health for women who otherwise would have almost certainly remained illiterate for the rest of their lives, and to assess whether access to health services increases or decreases the advantage conferred by education. Results from this retrospective cohort study of 4434 women show that among the children of women who became literate exclusively by adult education, mortality and risk of malnutrition are significantly lower than among those...

177 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the impact of women's literacy on child health for women who otherwise would have almost certainly remained illiterate for the rest of their lives, and assessed whether access to health services increases or decreases the advantage conferred by education.
Abstract: Research has consistently demonstrated a strong correlation between women's education and child health, but the absence of data from intervention studies has left open the possibility that this may be due to the confounding effects of wealth or social privilege. Moreover, it is not known what mechanisms mediate the education-health link, nor how it is affected by access to health services. In Nicaragua during the 1980s, thousands of adults became literate through a mass education campaign. This provided a rare opportunity to measure the impact of women's literacy on child health for women who otherwise would have almost certainly remained illiterate for the rest of their lives, and to assess whether access to health services increases or decreases the advantage conferred by education. Results from this retrospective cohort study of 4434 women show that among the children of women who became literate exclusively by adult education, mortality and risk of malnutrition are significantly lower than among those...

2 citations