Water, Sanitation, and hygiene for Child Health : some Evidence in support of Public Intervention in the Philippines 6
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ABSTRACT : As in many developing countries, diarrheal diseases remain a top cause of child mortality and morbidity in the Philippines. Partly to address this problem, the government has udertaken programs to expand or promote access to safe water and sanitation facilities, especially among poor households. Toassess the possible impact of such interventions on child health, we apply the prosperity score matching technique on the pooled data from the last fice rounds of the National Demographic and Health survey. We find that improved water and improved sanitation each reduced the probability of child diarrhea in 1993-2008 by around two percentage points. In 2013, improved water reduced the probability by about 7 percentgae points. On the other hand, improved sanitation does not seem the government programs to widen access to safe water and sanitation facilities as measures to improve child health