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Local capacities and health: The importance of transportation, communication, market sophistication, and skillful labor

Pazirandeh, Ala LU and Pirzamanbein, Behnaz (2011) 23rd annual NOFOMA conference, 2011
Abstract
Research suggests that access to transport, communication, market, and social infrastructure

is important for provision of health. Humanitarian organizations - realizing the importance of building

local capacities - are allocating noticeable time and resources on the process. But, studies testing this

relationship are scant. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relation between transportation,

communication, market, and labor capacity, as indicators of countries' local capacity on their health

level in terms of disease burdens, life expectancy, and infant mortality. The findings assist global health

policy makers to have a clear view of the effect of local infrastructure on... (More)
Research suggests that access to transport, communication, market, and social infrastructure

is important for provision of health. Humanitarian organizations - realizing the importance of building

local capacities - are allocating noticeable time and resources on the process. But, studies testing this

relationship are scant. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relation between transportation,

communication, market, and labor capacity, as indicators of countries' local capacity on their health

level in terms of disease burdens, life expectancy, and infant mortality. The findings assist global health

policy makers to have a clear view of the effect of local infrastructure on health. The paper addresses a

gap of empirical research in the impact of local infrastructure capacities on health levels.

A conceptual model was developed supported by previous literature. Structural equation modeling

was used to quantitatively test the relationship between local capacities and the level of health in

countries. To measure the constructs secondary data was used from the World Economic Forum (WEF)

database used to rank the global competitiveness of 139 countries. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
in press
subject
keywords
Capacity Building, Development Studies, Global Health, Humanitarian Logistics, Infrastructure, Structural equation Modeling
host publication
[Host publication title missing]
editor
Hammervoll, Trond Hammervoll and Larsen, Nils Magne
publisher
NOFOMA
conference name
23rd annual NOFOMA conference, 2011
conference location
Harstad, Norway
conference dates
2011-06-09 - 2011-06-10
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4502a11b-cfdd-4843-891a-79af69e88084 (old id 2062972)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:49:58
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:01:02
@inproceedings{4502a11b-cfdd-4843-891a-79af69e88084,
  abstract     = {{Research suggests that access to transport, communication, market, and social infrastructure<br/><br>
is important for provision of health. Humanitarian organizations - realizing the importance of building<br/><br>
local capacities - are allocating noticeable time and resources on the process. But, studies testing this<br/><br>
relationship are scant. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relation between transportation,<br/><br>
communication, market, and labor capacity, as indicators of countries' local capacity on their health<br/><br>
level in terms of disease burdens, life expectancy, and infant mortality. The findings assist global health<br/><br>
policy makers to have a clear view of the effect of local infrastructure on health. The paper addresses a<br/><br>
gap of empirical research in the impact of local infrastructure capacities on health levels.<br/><br>
A conceptual model was developed supported by previous literature. Structural equation modeling<br/><br>
was used to quantitatively test the relationship between local capacities and the level of health in<br/><br>
countries. To measure the constructs secondary data was used from the World Economic Forum (WEF)<br/><br>
database used to rank the global competitiveness of 139 countries.}},
  author       = {{Pazirandeh, Ala and Pirzamanbein, Behnaz}},
  booktitle    = {{[Host publication title missing]}},
  editor       = {{Hammervoll, Trond Hammervoll and Larsen, Nils Magne}},
  keywords     = {{Capacity Building; Development Studies; Global Health; Humanitarian
Logistics; Infrastructure; Structural equation Modeling}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{NOFOMA}},
  title        = {{Local capacities and health: The importance of transportation, communication, market sophistication, and skillful labor}},
  year         = {{2011}},
}