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Acknowledgements

Ahmad Reza Hosseinpoor (World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland) coordinated

the development of this handbook with the assistance of Nicole Bergen (Consultant, Geneva,

Switzerland). The handbook was initially conceptualized by Ahmad Reza Hosseinpoor and

Jennifer H. Lee (Consultant, Los Angeles, United States). The draft was prepared by Ahmad Reza

Hosseinpoor, Nicole Bergen and Kyle Ragins (Intern, World Health Organization) as well as Aluisio

J D Barros (Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil), Sam Harper (McGill University, Canada), Jennifer

H. Lee and Cesar Victora (Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil). The work benefited greatly from

the contribution of Ties Boerma (World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland), who reviewed

the handbook and provided valuable comments.

Funding for this project was provided in part by the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) and

by the Rockefeller Foundation. The collaboration of the coordinating project team members from

PHAC is gratefully acknowledged, in particular Jane Laishes, James McDonald and Andrea Long.

John Dawson provided copy-editing support and AvisAnne Julien proofread the document.

Design and layout by Paprika (Annecy, France)

Printed in Luxembourg




Health inequality monitoring: an overview





Figures

Figure 1.1 Cycle of health monitoring................................................................2

Figure 1.2 Components of a national health sector monitoring, evaluation and

review framework.............................................................................3

Figure 1.3 Example health indicators related to reproductive, maternal and

child health, displayed within a monitoring, evaluation and review

framework........................................................................................5

Figure 2.1 Data sources for health inequality monitoring..................................18

Figure 3.1 Births attended by skilled health personnel in Ghana, by wealth

quintile, DHS 2003 and 2008.........................................................34

Figure 3.2 Contraceptive prevalence (modern methods) in the Philippines, by

education level, DHS 1993 and 2008.............................................35

Figure 3.3 Proportion of women of reproductive age in the Philippines, by

education level, DHS 1993 and 2008.............................................36

Figure 3.4 Slope index of inequality: absolute inequality in smoking prevalence

in a population of men living in 27 middle-income countries, World

Health Survey 2002–2004..............................................................40

Figure 3.5 Relative wealth-based inequality in births attended by skilled

health personnel in Bangladesh and Egypt, represented using

concentration curves, DHS 2007 and 2008....................................43

Figure 3.6 Region-based inequality in DTP3 immunization coverage among

1-year-olds in the Philippines, DHS 2003 and 2008........................48

Figure 3.7 Region-based relative inequality in selected reproductive, maternal

and child health indicators in Egypt shown using (a) ratio and (b)

Theil index, DHS 1995 and 2008.................................................... 51

Figure 3.8 National average gap in coverage of reproductive, maternal and

child health services and within-country wealth-based inequality in

coverage gap in 24 low- and middle-income African countries, DHS

and MICS 2005–2011 ...................................................................54

Figure 4.1 Contraceptive prevalence (modern methods) in Egypt, by wealth

quintile, DHS 1995, 2000 and 2005...............................................60

Figure 4.2 Time trend in measles immunization in Colombia, by place of

residence, DHS 1993, 1998, 2003 and 2008.................................62

vi Handbook on health inequality monitoring

Figure 4.3 Benchmarking the latest status of births attended by skilled health

personnel in Malawi against 22 other low-income African countries,

by wealth quintile, DHS 2005–2010...............................................64

Figure 4.4 Benchmarking the latest status of wealth-based absolute inequality

in births attended by skilled health personnel in Vanuatu against

11 other low- and middle-income Asia-Pacific countries, DHS and

MICS 2005–2010...........................................................................65

Figure 4.5 Benchmarking time trend in under-five mortality rate in Zambia

against 12 other middle-income countries, by place of residence,

DHS 1996–2000 and 2006–2010..................................................66

Figure 4.6 Patterns of health inequality, shown using coverage of births

attended by skilled health personnel in Bangladesh, Gambia, Jordan

and Viet Nam, by wealth quintile, DHS and MICS 2005–2007 .......68

Figure 4.7 Coverage of selected maternal health service indicators in the

Philippines, by wealth quintile, DHS 2008.......................................69

Figure 4.8 Wealth-based inequality in stunting among children under five in

70 countries, DHS and MICS 2005–2011 ......................................74

Figure 4.9 Wealth-based inequality and national average in stunting among

children under five in 70 countries, DHS and MICS 2005–2011......75

Figure 4.10 Relative wealth-based inequality and national prevalence in smoking

in (a) men and (b) women in 48 low- and middle-income countries,

World Health Survey, 2002–2004................................................... 77

Figure 4.11 Under-five mortality rate in Nigeria, by place of residence and wealth,

DHS 2008 .....................................................................................78

Figure 4.12 Four-quadrant view of benchmarking time trends in infant mortality

rate in 20 African countries over a five-year period, wealth-based

inequality versus national average..................................................80

Figure 4.13 Time trends in inequality in subgroups in the case of (a) increasing

prevalence and (b) decreasing prevalence of a health indicator,

highlighting different scenarios for absolute and relative inequality .81

Figure 4.14 Time trends in births attended by skilled health personnel, in (a)

Cambodia, (b) Nepal and (c) Cameroon, by wealth quintile, DHS and

MICS 1996–2010...........................................................................82

 vii

Figure 5.1 Time trend of selected reproductive, maternal and child health

service indicators in the Philippines, by wealth quintile, DHS 1998,

2003 and 2008..............................................................................95

Figure 5.2 Time trend of (a) antenatal care (at least four visits), (b) antenatal care

(at least one visit), (c) family planning needs satisfied and (d) vitamin

A supplementation among children under five in the Philippines, by

wealth quintile, DHS 1998, 2003 and 2008....................................96

Figure 5.3 Benchmarking the latest status of wealth-based absolute inequality

in births attended by skilled health personnel in the Philippines

against 11 other low- and middle-income Asia-Pacific countries,

DHS and MICS 2005–2010............................................................

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