Health of children less than 5 years old in an upper middle income country: parents' views
Paul Andrew Bourne
.
DOI: 10.4236/health.2010.24054   PDF    HTML     5,398 Downloads   9,584 Views   Citations

Abstract

Health literature in the Caribbean, and in particular Jamaica, has continued to use objective indices such as mortality and morbidity to examine children’s health. The current study uses subjective indices such as parent-reported health conditions and health status to evaluate the health of children instead of traditional objective indices. The study seeks 1) to examine the health and health care-seeking behaviour of the sample from the parents’ viewpoints; and 2) to compute the mean age of the sample with a particular illness and describe whether there is an epidemiological shift in these conditions. Two nationally representative cross-sectional surveys were used for this study (2002 and 2007). The sample for the current study is 3,062 respondents aged less than 5 years. For 2002, the study extracted a sample of 2,448 under 5 year olds from the national survey of 25,018 respondents, and 614 under 5 year olds were extracted from the 2007 survey of 6,728 respondents. Parents-reported information was used to measure issues on children under 5 years old. In 2007, 43.4% of the sample had very good health status; 46.7% good health status; 2.5% poor health and 0.3% very poor health status. Almost 15% of children had illnesses in 2002, and 6% more had illnesses in 2007 over 2002. In 2002, the percentage of the sample with particular chronic illnesses was: diabetes mellitus (0.6%); hypertension (0.3%) and arthritis (0.3%). However, none was recorded in 2007. The mean age of children less than 5 years old with acute health conditions (i.e. diarrhoea, respiratory diseases and influenza) increased over 2002. In 2007, 43.4% of children less than 5 years old had very good health status; 46.7% good health status; 7.1% fair health status; 2.5% poor and 0.3% very poor health status. The association between health status and parent- reported illness was –x2 (df = 4) = 57.494, P< 0.001-with the relationship being a weak one, correlation coefficient=0.297. A cross-tabulation between health status and parent-reported diagnosed illness found that a significant statistical correlation existed between the two variables –x2 (df = 16) = 26.621, P < 0.05, cc = 0.422, – with the association being a moderate one, correlation coefficient = 0.422. A cross tabulation between health status and health care- seeking behaviour found a significant statistical association between the two variables –x2 (df = 4) = 10.513, P < 0.033-with the correlation being a weak one-correlation coefficient = 0.281. Rural children had the least health status. The health disparity that existed between rural and urban less than 5 year olds showed that this will not be removed simply because of the abolition of health care utilization fees.

Share and Cite:

Bourne, P. (2010) Health of children less than 5 years old in an upper middle income country: parents' views. Health, 2, 356-365. doi: 10.4236/health.2010.24054.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] Lindo, J. (2006) Jamaican perinatal mortality survey, Jamaica Ministry of Health. Kingston, 1-40.
[2] McCarthy, J.E. and Evans-Gilbert, T. (2009) Descriptive epidemiology of mortality and morbidity of health-indicator diseases in hospitalized children from western Jamaica. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 80, 596-600.
[3] Domenach, H. and Guengant, J. (1984) Infant mortality and fertility in the Caribbean basin. Cah Orstom (Sci Hum), 20, 265-72.
[4] Rodriquez, F.V., Lopez, N.B., and Choonara, I. (2002) Child health in Cuba. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 93, 991-3.
[5] McCaw-Binns, A., Holder, Y., Spence, K., Gordon- Strachan, G., Nam, V., and Ashley, D. (2002) Multi- source method for determining mortality in Jamaica: 1996 and 1998. Department of Community Health and Psychiatry, University of the West Indies. International Biostatistics Information Services. Division of Health Promotion and Protection, Ministry of Health, Jamaica. Statistical Institute of Jamaica, Kingston.
[6] McCaw-Binns, A.M., Fox, K., Foster-Williams, K., Ashley, D.E., and Irons, B. (1996) Registration of births, stillbirths and infant deaths in Jamaica. International Journal of Epidemiology, 25, 807-813.
[7] World Health Organization (1948) Preamble to the Constitution of the World Health Organization as adopted by the International Health Conference, New York, June 19-22, 1946; signed on July 22, 1946 by the representatives of 61 States (Official Records of the World Health Organization, 2, 100) and entered into force on April 7, 1948. “Constitution of the World Health Organization, 1948.” In Basic Documents, 15th Edion, World Health Organization, Geneva.
[8] World Health Organization (2004) Healthy life expectancy 2002: 2004 world health report. World Health Organization, Geneva.
[9] World Health Organization (2000) WHO issues new healthy life expectancy rankings: Japan number one in new ‘healthy life’ system. World Health Organization, Washington D. C. & Geneva.
[10] Jamaica Ministry of Health (1992-2007) Annual report 1991-2006. Jamaica Ministry of Health, Kingston.
[11] Statistical Institute of Jamaica (1981-2009) Demographic statistics, Statistical Institute of Jamaica, Kingston.
[12] Planning Institute of Jamaica (1981-2009) Economic and social survey. Planning Institute of Jamaica, Kingston.
[13] Planning Institute of Jamaica and Statistical Institute of Jamaica (1989-2009) Jamaica Survey of Living Conditions, 1988-2008. PIOJ and STATIN, Kingston.
[14] Pan American Health Organization (2007) Health in the Americas, volume II Countries. Pan American Health Organization, Washington DC.
[15] Morgan, W. Ed. (2005) Health issues in the Caribbean. Ian Randle, Kingston.
[16] Walker, S. (2005) Nutrition and child health develop- ment. In Morgan, W. Ed., Health issues in the Caribbean, Ian Randle, Kingston, 15-25.
[17] Samms-Vaugh, M., Jackson, M., and Ashley, D. (2005) School achievement and behaviour in Jamaican children. In Morgan, W. Ed. Health issues in the Caribbean, Ian Randle, Kingston, 26-37.
[18] Statistical Institute of Jamaica. (2008) Jamaica survey of living conditions, 2007, Kingston, Jamaica. Statistical Institute of Jamaica, Planning Institute of Jamaica and Derek Gordon Databank, University of the West Indies, Kingston, Jamaica.
[19] Statistical Institute of Jamaica. (2003) Jamaica survey of living conditions. Statistical Institute of Jamaica, Kingston, Planning Institute of Jamaica and Derek Gordon Databank, University of the West Indies.
[20] World Bank, Development Research Group, (2002). Poverty and human resources. Jamaica Survey of Living Conditions (LSLC) 1988-2000: Basic Information.
[21] Marmot, M. (2002) The influence of income on health: Views of an Epidemiologist. Does money really matter? Or is it a marker for something else? Health Affair, 21, 31-46.
[22] Bourne, P.A. (2009) Impact of poverty, not seeking medical care, unemployment, inflation, self-reported illness, health insurance on mortality in Jamaica. North American Journal of Medical Sciences, 1, 99-109.
[23] Kahneman, D. and Riis, J. (2005) Living, and thinking about it, two perspectives. In Huppert, F. A., Kaverne, B. and N. Baylis, The Science of Well-Being, Oxford University Press.
[24] Schwarz, N. and Strack, F. (1999) Reports of subjective well-being: Judgmental processes and their methodological implications. In Kahneman, D., Diener, E., Schwarz, N. Eds., Well-Being: The Foundations of Hedonic Psychology. Russell Sage Foundation, New York, 61-84.
[25] Diener, E. (1984) Subjective well-being. Psychological Bulletin, 95, 542-75.
[26] Smith, J. (1994) Measuring health and economic status of older adults in developing countries. Gerontologist, 34, 491-6.
[27] Idler, E.L. and Benjamin, Y. (1997) Self-rated health and mortality: A review of twenty-seven community studies. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 38, 21-37.
[28] Idler, E.L. and Kasl, S. (1995) Self-ratings of health: Do they also predict change in functional ability? Journal of Gerontology, 50, S344-S353.
[29] Schechter, S., Beatty, P., and Willis, G.B. (1998) Asking survey respondents about health status: Judgment and response issues. In Schwarz, N., Park, D., Knauper, B., and Sudman, S. Eds., Cognition, Aging, and Self- Reports, Taylor and Francis, Ann Arbor.
[30] Bourne, P.A. (2009) The validity of using self-reported illness to measure objective health. North American Journal of Medical Sciences, 1, 232-238.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.