Disease complementarities and the evaluation of public health interventions

Type Journal Article - NBER Working Paper Series
Title Disease complementarities and the evaluation of public health interventions
Author(s)
Volume 5216
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 1995
URL http://www.nber.org/papers/w5216
Abstract
This paper provides a theoretical and empirical investigation of the positive complementarities between disease-specific policies introduced by competing risks of mortality. The incentive to invest in prevention against one cause of death depends positively on the level of survival from other causes. This means that a specific public health intervention has benefits other than the direct medical reduction in mortality: it affects the incentives to fight other diseases so the overall reduction in mortality will, in general, be larger than that predicted by the direct medical effects. We discuss evidence of these cross-disease effects by using data on neo-natal tetanus vaccination through the Expanded Programme on Immunization of the World Health Organization.

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