The Value of Preventing Malaria in Tembien, Ethiopia

The authors measure the monetary value households place on preventing malaria in Tembien, Tigray Region, Ethiopia. They estimate a household demand function for a hypothetical malaria vaccine and compute the value of preventing malaria as the households maximum willingness to pay to provide vaccines for all family members. They contrast willingness to pay with the traditional costs of illness (medical costs and time lost because of malaria). Their results indicate that the value of preventing malaria with vaccines is about US$36 a household a year, or about 15 percent of imputed annual household income. This is, on average, about two or three times the expected household cost of illness. Despite the great benefits from preventing malaria, the fact that vaccine demand is price inelastic suggests that it will be difficult to achieve significant market penetration unless the vaccine is subsidized. The authors obtain similar results for insecticide-treated bed nets. Their estimates of household demand functions for bed nets suggest that at a price that might permit cost recovery (US$6 a bed net), only a third of the population of a 200-person village would sleep under bed nets.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cropper, Maureen L., Haile, Mitiku, Lampietti, Julian A., Poulos, Christine, Whittington, Dale
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2000-01
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AGRICULTURE, BUDGET CONSTRAINTS, COMMUNITY HEALTH, CONTINGENT VALUATION, DAMAGES, DEMAND CURVE, DEMAND CURVES, DIARRHEAL DISEASE, ECONOMICS LITERATURE, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS, EXPENDITURES, EXTERNALITIES, FAMILIES, FOOD PREPARATION, HEALTH CARE, HOUSING, IMPREGNATED BEDNETS, INCOME, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, INFECTION, LABOR MARKETS, LEISURE, LEISURE TIME, LORENZ CURVE, MALARIA, MARGINAL PRODUCTIVITY, MEDICAL TREATMENT, MORBIDITY, MOTIVATION, PATIENTS, PILL, PRIVATE COSTS, PRODUCTION FUNCTION, PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS, PRODUCTIVITY, PROGRAMS, PUBLIC HEALTH, RAINFALL, RAINY SEASON, RESOURCE ALLOCATION, SOCIAL COSTS, VACCINES, WAGES, WILLINGNESS TO PAY, WORKERS, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/01/438962/value-preventing-malaria-tembien-ethiopia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22266
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