地理与发展之间的认知联系:坦桑尼亚的碘缺乏和受教育程度

Erica M. Field, Omar Robles, M. Torero
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引用次数: 18

摘要

据估计,每年有2000万出生的儿童面临因子宫内缺碘而导致脑损伤的风险,缺碘是已知对认知发育产生重大且不可逆转影响的唯一微量营养素缺乏症。碘缺乏症(IDD)引起的认知损伤通过对人力资本获得的影响,对经济增长具有潜在的重要影响。为了衡量这种影响的程度,我们评估了由于在坦桑尼亚密集分发碘化油胶囊(IOC)而导致的胎儿缺碘率降低对儿童学业成绩的影响。我们通过评估在子宫内受益于IOC的儿童在10至14岁时是否比没有受益于IOC的兄弟姐妹和该地区的年龄更大或更小的儿童表现出更高的年级进步率,来寻找可归功于干预的认知能力改善的证据。我们的研究结果表明,减少胎儿IDD对儿童认知有显著的好处:在子宫内预防IDD与0.36年的额外学校教育有关。此外,对女孩的影响似乎更大,这与实验室研究的新证据一致,表明女性胎儿对母亲甲状腺剥夺的认知更敏感。没有迹象表明IOC改善了发病率或因病缺勤率,这表明IOC通过其对认知的影响而不是对健康的影响来改善学校教育。然而,有微弱的证据表明,该计划也降低了儿童死亡率,但没有降低胎儿或婴儿死亡率,这可能会降低对教育的估计效果。跨国回归估计证实了坦桑尼亚的结果,表明总甲状腺肿率有很强的负面影响,而食盐碘化对女性上学参与率有很强的积极影响。总之,这些发现为生态条件对经济发展的直接影响提供了微观层面的证据,并表明学习障碍率的差异在解释跨国增长模式和受教育程度的性别差异方面可能发挥重要作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Cognitive Link between Geography and Development: Iodine Deficiency and Schooling Attainment in Tanzania
An estimated 20 million children born each year are at risk of brain damage from in utero iodine deficiency, the only micronutrient deficiency known to have significant, non-reversible effects on cognitive development. Cognitive damage from iodine deficiency disorders (IDD) has potentially important implications for economic growth through its effect on human capital attainment. To gauge the magnitude of this influence, we evaluate the impact of reductions in fetal IDD on child schooling attainment that resulted from an intensive distribution of iodized oil capsules (IOC) in Tanzania. We look for evidence of improvements in cognitive ability attributable to the intervention by assessing whether children who benefited from IOC in utero exhibit higher rates of grade progression at ages 10 to 14 relative to siblings and older and younger children in the district who did not. Our findings suggest that reducing fetal IDD has significant benefits for child cognition: Protection from IDD in utero is associated with 0.36 years of additional schooling. Furthermore, the effect appears to be substantially larger for girls, consistent with new evidence from laboratory studies indicating greater cognitive sensitivity of the female fetus to maternal thyroid deprivation. There is no indication that IOC improved rates of illness or school absence due to illness, suggesting that IOC improves schooling through its effect on cognition rather than its effect on health. However, there is weak evidence that the program also reduced child but not fetal or infant mortality, which may bias downward the estimated effect on education. Cross-country regression estimates corroborate the results from Tanzania, indicating a strong negative influence of total goiter rate and strong positive influence of salt iodization on female school participation. Together, these findings provide micro-level evidence of the direct influence of ecological conditions on economic development and suggest a potentially important role of variation in rates of learning disability in explaining cross-country growth patterns and gender differences in schooling attainment.
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