Original Research
Can religion kill? The association between membership of the Apostolic faith and child mortality in Zimbabwe
Journal of Public Health in Africa | Vol 9, No 2 | a917 |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4081/jphia.2018.707
| © 2024 Wei Ha, Stanley Gwavuya, Peter Salama
| This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 18 November 2024 | Published: 01 October 2018
Submitted: 18 November 2024 | Published: 01 October 2018
About the author(s)
Wei Ha, Graduate School of Education and Institute of Economics of Education, Peking University, ChinaStanley Gwavuya, UNICEF Pacific, Suva, Fiji
Peter Salama, UNICEF Regional Office for Middle East and North Africa, Amman, Jordan
Full Text:
PDF (393KB)Abstract
Existing literature has been equivocal about the effect of religion on utilization of health service and health outcomes. While followers of particularized theology hypothesis believe that doctrinal teachings, beliefs and values of religious groups directly influence health access and outcomes, the advocates of the selectivity hypothesis claim that the observed disparities between religious groups mainly reflect differential access to social and human capital which in turn determines health access and outcome rather than religion per se. Using household data from the Zimbabwe Multiple Indicator Monitoring Survey 2009, we find that household heads’ affiliation with apostolic faith put children under five years old at greater risk of death compared to other religious groups. This effect remains strong even after controlling for a wide range of socio-economic and demographics characteristics of the households in multivariate logit regressions.
Keywords
Apostolic faith; child mortality; Zimbabwe
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