Rural origin as a risk factor for maternal and child health in periurban Bolivia
Deborah E. Bender,
Tirsa Rivera and
Donna Madonna
Social Science & Medicine, 1993, vol. 37, issue 11, 1345-1349
Abstract:
Rapid migration in Latin America is settling rural women and their families next to those of urban origin in sprawling urban settings. Those born and reared in rural areas bring with them knowledge and skills learned and adapted to rural areas; those same skills may be maladaptive in urban areas. Hypothesized is that urban women of rural origin are more likely to have poorer health outcomes for themselves and their children than lifelong urban counterparts. Identification of specific risk factors affecting child and/or maternal health status in peri-urban barrios can assist health workers to target limited resources to those least likely to access available services.
Keywords: maternal; health; child; survival; periurban; residence; developing; countries (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1993
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