Abstract

BackgroundThe economic impact of schistosomiasis and the underlying tradeoffs between water resources development and public health concerns have yet to be quantified. Schistosomiasis exerts large health, social and financial burdens on infected individuals and households. While irrigation schemes are one of the most important policy responses designed to reduce poverty, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, they facilitate the propagation of schistosomiasis and other diseases.MethodsWe estimate the economic impact of schistosomiasis in Burkina Faso via its effect on agricultural production. We create an original dataset that combines detailed household and agricultural surveys with high-resolution geo-statistical disease maps. We develop new methods that use the densities of the intermediate host snails of schistosomiasis as instrumental variables together with panel, spatial and machine learning techniques.ResultsWe estimate that the elimination of schistosomiasis in Burkina Faso would increase average crop yields by around 7%, rising to 32% for high infection clusters. Keeping schistosomiasis unchecked, in turn, would correspond to a loss of gross domestic product of approximately 0.8%. We identify the disease burden as a shock to the agricultural productivity of farmers. The poorest households engaged in subsistence agriculture bear a far heavier disease burden than their wealthier counterparts, experiencing an average yield loss due to schistosomiasis of between 32 and 45%. We show that the returns to water resources development are substantially reduced once its health effects are taken into account: villages in proximity of large-scale dams suffer an average yield loss of around 20%, and this burden decreases as distance between dams and villages increases.ConclusionsThis study provides a rigorous estimation of how schistosomiasis affects agricultural production and how it is both a driver and a consequence of poverty. It further quantifies the tradeoff between the economics of water infrastructures and their impact on public health. Although we focus on Burkina Faso, our approach can be applied to any country in which schistosomiasis is endemic.Graphical

Highlights

  • The economic impact of schistosomiasis and the underlying tradeoffs between water resources devel‐ opment and public health concerns have yet to be quantified

  • In order to provide a more intuitive measure of the economic impact of schistosomiasis, in the labels we present the percentage loss of agricultural yield due to schistosomiasis suffered by the households that experience the average infection intensity

  • There is an extensive literature on both the epidemiology and the ecology of schistosomiasis which shows how its diffusion patterns are closely related to anthropic factors

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Summary

Introduction

The economic impact of schistosomiasis and the underlying tradeoffs between water resources devel‐ opment and public health concerns have yet to be quantified. Severe morbidity due to schistosomiasis results from the accumulation of eggs laid by flatworms of the genus Schistosoma that are trapped in the tissues of the human host, leading to a chronic inflammatory response. The highest parasite burden is usually borne by school-age children and the disease has been linked to anemia, stunting and cognitive deficits, leading to poor school performance and higher drop-out rates [7]. Due to these life-long impacts, schistosomiasis exerts large health, social and financial burdens on infected individuals and households [8]

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