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When Sterilizations Lower Immunizations: The Emergency Experience in India (1975-77)

Author

Listed:
  • Charlotte Pelras

    (Paris School of Economics)

  • Andrea Renk

    (Center for Research in the Economics of Development, University of Namur)

Abstract

In the 1970s in India, an aggressive family-planning program resulted in more than eight million sterilizations. We study whether this campaign affected demand for health services, specifically children's immunization and hospital births. We show that excessive sterilizations led to a substantial decrease in the use of these services, especially vaccination. If half of the sterilizations in a state were excessive (compared to none), the probabilities of receiving any vaccine and the triple antigen vaccine were respectively 17% and 34% lower for children born after the event as compared to their older siblings or older children in the same village. We find evidence suggesting the mechanism is a decline in trust rather than a change in health supply or valuation of children.

Suggested Citation

  • Charlotte Pelras & Andrea Renk, 2022. "When Sterilizations Lower Immunizations: The Emergency Experience in India (1975-77)," DeFiPP Working Papers 2206, University of Namur, Development Finance and Public Policies.
  • Handle: RePEc:nam:defipp:2206
    as

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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
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