Abstract

Malaria is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. It is also a dynamic contributor to poverty through its effects on children’s cognitive development. This paper examines the degree to which malaria in early childhood impacts on educational achievement in later childhood. The substantial decline in malaria in the region over recent years allows an assessment of its impact to be made. Focusing on Tanzania, we combine data from the Malaria Atlas Project and the 2010–2014 Uwezo household surveys (N = 246,325). We relate the district-level risk of malaria in a child’s year of birth to his/her performance in tests of acquired cognitive skills (literacy and numeracy). For causal identification, we rely on differences across districts in the pace of decline in malaria prevalence occurring over the last 15 years. We control for time-invariant district level, age, birth cohort and survey year effects, as well as district-level trends and individual and household-specific factors. In addition, we use sibling variation in birth-year exposure to malaria to strengthen our identification. A ten percentage-point decrease in malaria prevalence in birth year is associated with a 0.06 standard deviation (p = 0.000) increase in English literacy achievement. This estimate is comparable in magnitude to education intervention programs with very large effects. Our results are robust to a large number of sensitivity analyses. We find no statistically significant effects of birth-year malaria exposure on attainments in numeracy and Kiswahili, and we argue that this is probably attributable to strong ceiling effects in these test scores. We conclude that in Tanzania malaria is an important factor in geographical variation in English literacy. This indicates that malaria is a significant public health challenge to educational achievement in this country, and probably in other regions with malaria.

Highlights

  • Malaria infection in childhood has been associated with persistent cognitive impairment [1,2,3]

  • For English literacy, the relationship between birth-year malaria prevalence and test scores is reduced in magnitude but remains statistically significant

  • We have shown that birth-year district-level malaria prevalence negatively predicts performance in English literacy tests among children of primary school age

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Malaria infection in childhood has been associated with persistent cognitive impairment [1,2,3]. We use repeated cross-sectional data on test scores, collected at the household level, which are representative at both national and district levels This enables us to control for time-invariant district level, age, birth cohort and survey year effects, as well as individual and household-specific factors. To our knowledge this is the first study to use nationally representative longitudinal data to estimate the impact of early life malaria exposure on academic performance in school-age children in Africa.

Methods
Procedures and statistical analysis
Results
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call