Weather Shocks, Birth and Early Life Health: Evidence of Different Gender Impacts

Author:

Abiona Olukorede12

Affiliation:

1. Macquarie University Business School (MQBS) and Australian Institute of Health Innovation (AIHI), Level 5, 75 Talavera Road, Macquarie University, Macquarie, Sydney, NSW 2113, Australia Macquarie University Centre for the Health Economy (MUCHE)–

2. University of Technology Sydney Business School (UTS Business School), University of Technology Sydney Centre for Health Economics Research and Evaluation (CHERE), , Haymarket, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

Abstract

Abstract This paper examines the impact of exposure to weather events during gestation on birth weight and anthropometric health of a cohort of children. We explore birth records for the cohort of children born between 2003 and 2013 in Sierra Leone using Demographic Health Surveys linked to temporal variation of rainfall and temperature patterns. We find that in utero droughts (or abnormally low precipitation levels) increase the prevalence of low birth weight with larger effects among boys. However, the effects of those same in utero shocks on the prevalence of stunting up to 59 months later are smaller for boys than for girls. The gender difference in estimated impacts from birth to anthropometric health is attributed to food consumption patterns that favour boys. Our results have policy implications for tracking health outcomes during early childhood using birth and anthropometric health, especially by gender.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Development

Reference54 articles.

1. Supply Shocks and Gender Bias in Child Health Investments: Evidence From the ICDS Programme in India;Abhishek;The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy,2010

2. Adverse Effects of Early Life Extreme Precipitation Shocks on Short-Term Health and Adulthood Welfare Outcomes;Abiona;Review of Development Economics,2017

3. Malnutrition Pathway for the Impact of in utero Drought Shock on Child Growth Indicators in Rural Households;Abiona;Environment and Development Economics,2022

4. The Impact of Timing of in-utero Drought Shocks on Birth Outcomes in Rural Households: Evidence from Sierra Leone;Abiona;Journal of Population Economics,2022

5. El Niño and Children: Medium-Term Effects of Early-Life Weather Shocks on Cognitive and Health Outcomes;Aguilar;World Development,2022

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