Child Health and Nutritional Status of Children: The Role of Sex Differentials
Abstract
Son preference, or the privileging of sons over daughters in accordance to a patriarchal system, isa growing phenomenon in India. In the era of UN Millennium Development Goals where one of the objectives is to ‘increase gender equality and empower women’, the issue of son preference is even more widely debated. The data for the study is drawn from the National Family HealthSurvey-2 (NFHS-2) of 1988-99. The main objective of this paper is to examine the patterns of gender differences for children in the north state of Haryana in India for health outcomes. Specifically it addresses the incidence, and use of preventive and curative health care services and nutrition. Does the extent of male bias if it is present, depend on the socioeconomic status, caste, religion, education, and rural/urban residence of the head of the household? The odds of female children being discriminated against with respect to each of these indicators are estimated by using logistics regression analysis.