The exposure to violence in utero and early in life has adverse impacts
on
children's age-adjusted height (z-scores). Using the experience of the
Kashmir insurgency,
I find that children more affected by the insurgency are 0.9 to 1.4
standard deviations
smaller compared with children less affected by the insurgency. The
effect is stronger for
children who were born during peaks in violence. A robust finding in the
health literature
is that shorter children perform worse in schools, in jobs, and are
sicker throughout their
life. Here, children already negatively affected by the insurgency in
their height, are also
more likely to be sick in the two weeks prior to the survey. SOURCE:
Households in Conflict Network // Institute of Development Studies //
University of Sussex Read more
No comments:
Post a Comment