We investigate the economic consequences of sickness and death and the manner in which poor urban households in Bangladesh respond to such events. Based on panel data we assess the effects of morbidity and mortality episodes on household income, medical spending, labor supply, and consumption. We find that despite maintaining household labor supply, serious illness exerts a negative effect on income for the poor. However, the estimates do not reject consumption smoothing. The most prominent responses to finance current needs are increasing household debt through borrowing and depleting productive assets, both of which have detrimental effects on future consumption
We assess the economic risk of ill health for households in Indonesia and the role of informal copin...
BACKGROUND: Bangladesh has a high proportion of households incurring catastrophic health expenditure...
Background: Out-of-pocket (OOP) payments for healthcare have been increasing steadily in Bangladesh,...
This paper investigates the economic consequences of sickness and death and the manner in which poor...
Background: In Matlab, Bangladesh, a rural sub-district with ongoing demographic surveillance, an ep...
We assess the financial risk of ill health for households in Indonesia, the role of informal coping ...
Background: Little is known about long-term changes linking chronic diseases and poverty in low-inco...
In low-income countries, a growing proportion of the disease burden is attributable to non-communica...
This paper uses household survey data collected in September-October 2009 on a nationally representa...
The literature suggests that in developing countries illness shocks at the household level can have ...
The objective of this study was to explore the influences of the health and socio-economic factors a...
Poor households in rural Bangladesh often face concurring idiosyncratic and aggregate shocks, which ...
In low-income countries, a growing proportion of the disease burden is attributable to non- communic...
We use panel data on household consumption combined with information taken from the medical records ...
We assess the economic risk of ill health for households in Indonesia and the role of informal copin...
We assess the economic risk of ill health for households in Indonesia and the role of informal copin...
BACKGROUND: Bangladesh has a high proportion of households incurring catastrophic health expenditure...
Background: Out-of-pocket (OOP) payments for healthcare have been increasing steadily in Bangladesh,...
This paper investigates the economic consequences of sickness and death and the manner in which poor...
Background: In Matlab, Bangladesh, a rural sub-district with ongoing demographic surveillance, an ep...
We assess the financial risk of ill health for households in Indonesia, the role of informal coping ...
Background: Little is known about long-term changes linking chronic diseases and poverty in low-inco...
In low-income countries, a growing proportion of the disease burden is attributable to non-communica...
This paper uses household survey data collected in September-October 2009 on a nationally representa...
The literature suggests that in developing countries illness shocks at the household level can have ...
The objective of this study was to explore the influences of the health and socio-economic factors a...
Poor households in rural Bangladesh often face concurring idiosyncratic and aggregate shocks, which ...
In low-income countries, a growing proportion of the disease burden is attributable to non- communic...
We use panel data on household consumption combined with information taken from the medical records ...
We assess the economic risk of ill health for households in Indonesia and the role of informal copin...
We assess the economic risk of ill health for households in Indonesia and the role of informal copin...
BACKGROUND: Bangladesh has a high proportion of households incurring catastrophic health expenditure...
Background: Out-of-pocket (OOP) payments for healthcare have been increasing steadily in Bangladesh,...