A Multilevel Hazards Model for Child Mortality in Nigeria - Biostatistics & Biometric Applications
Many researchers have devoted considerable attention to the
impact of individual-level factors on child mortality, but little is known
about how family and community characteristics affect health of children. Trend
in child mortality as well as its determinants, has long been the subject of
academic and policy debates. In spite of this, the problem of child mortality
remains as daunting as ever. In fact, advancement in medical sciences and the
upsurge in information and telecommunication technology equipment have not
significantly reduced child mortality in the country, unlike in the West.The Multilevel
proportional hazards model for data that are hierarchically clustered at three levels
was applied to the study of covariates of child mortality in Nigeria. This study
merges two parallel developments of statistical tools for data analysis: statistical
methods known as hazard models that are used for analyzing event-duration data
and statistical methods for analyzing hierarchically clustered data known as multilevel
models. These developments have rarely been integrated in research practice and
the formalization and estimation of models for hierarchically clustered survival
data remain largely uncharted. The model was estimated using the
Newton-Raphsons numerical search approach. The model accounts for hierarchical
clustering with three random effects or frailty effects. We assume that the
random effects are independent and follow the Exponential and Weibull
distribution.The results indicate that bio-demographic factors are more important
in infancy while socioeconomic factors and household and environmental
conditions have a greater effect in childhood. Furthermore, there is
significant variation in child mortality risks even after controlling for measured
determinants of mortality. Also, factors that fall under family and community level
are more significant indicating that child survival is most controlled or
determined by family and community factors and variables at the child level is
not weighty. This suggests that there may exits unobserved or unobservable factors
related to mortality.
Read more...PDF in Iris Publishers
No comments:
Post a Comment