KEN_2005_GEHDS-W2_v01_EN_M_v01_A_OCS
Greater Eldoret Health and Development Survey, Wave 2, 2005
Name | Country code |
---|---|
Kenya | KEN |
Other Household Survey [hh/oth]
This is the second round of the Greater Eldoret Health and Development Survey. The first round was conducted in 2005, and the third one in 2006. The data collected in the second round of the survey (as well as future rounds) provide the longitudinal information necessary for examining changes in socio-economic status resulting from treatment. Subsequent analysis will therefore address the topic of treatment impacts more extensively. Future work will also examine other diseases in the survey area as well.
Information from these households thus presents an opportunity to understand the health and socio-economic characteristics of the population served by the Mosoriot health centre. The Mosoriot Rural Health Training Centre is located approximately 25 kilometers south of Eldoret town and is the main health care provider in Kosirai Division. The health centre provides primary care services and is mainly an outpatient facility. In addition, a collaboration between Indiana University and the Moi University Faculty of Health Sciences has established an electronic medical record system (MMRS) at Mosoriot which contains a range of clinical information on all patients who visit the health centre (Hannan, et al. 2000). In 2001, this same collaboration also created the Academic Model for the Prevention and Treatment of HIV/AIDS (AMPATH). AMPATH's first rural HIV clinic was opened in Mosoriot in November 2001 (Cohen, 2004). Beginning in late-2003, the HIV clinic at Mosoriot has experienced tremendous growth, with the number of patients rising from less than 100 in 2003 to over 800 as of October 2004 (AMPATH data).
Sample survey data [ssd]
Households
The scope of the Greater Eldoret Health and Development Survey includes:
(a) HOUSEHOLD:
Current household members children residing elsewhere
Permanent individual roster
Education
Education expenditures
Health and health services use
Food consumption and expenditures
Other household expenses
Assets
Income and activities
Agricultural activities
Enterprises
Unexpected events
Transfers and credit
Time allocation
Knowledge and behaviour
Anthropometrics
Polygamous household identification
(b) YOUTH:
Background characteristics
Education
Marriage
Knowledge of HIV/AIDS
HIV testing
Sexual behaviour
Job training
Income and expenditures
Topic | Vocabulary |
---|---|
Social Development | FAO |
Children & Youth | FAO |
Food (production, crisis) | FAO |
Agriculture & Rural Development | FAO |
Access to Finance | FAO |
Health | FAO |
Nutrition | FAO |
Population & Reproductive Health | FAO |
Labor | FAO |
Regional
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Markus Goldstein and Harsha Thirumurthy | The World Bank |
(a) SURVEY AREA
The household survey was conducted in Kosirai Division, a rural area located in the Nandi North District of western Kenya. Kosirai division has an area of 195 square kilometers (76 square miles) and a population of 35,383 individuals and 6,643 households (Central Bureau of Statistics, 1999). The survey households are scattered across more than 100 villages where animal and crop farming are the primary economic activity. The survey's random sample of 512 households (described below) is intended to be representative of households in Kosirai Division. Information from these households thus presents an opportunity to understand the health and socio-economic characteristics of the population served by the Mosoriot health centre.
(b) SAMPLE SELECTION
A range of factors were considered when designing the sample of households in the survey. A random sample of households in Kosirai Division was created to provide representative information on the disease burden and socio-economic issues in the survey area. To further examine specific issues relating to HIV/AIDS (such as impacts of the disease and treatment), a separate sample of HIV-positive patients in AMPATH's HIV clinic was chosen. Finally, a small sample of VCT clients (who tested HIV-positive or HIV-negative) was chosen to examine issues relating to HIV testing. It should be noted that the random sample also serves as a comparison group to the HIV and VCT samples. The sample of survey households is thus comprised of three different groups:
(i) 512 households chosen randomly from a household census of Kosirai Division (the random sample)
(ii) 250 households with at least one HIV-positive individual who receives medical care at the HIV clinic in the Mosoriot health centre (the HIV sample, or "HIV households")
(iii) 61 households with an individual who has recently visited the VCT clinic in MRHTC (the VCT sample)
Of the 250 households in the HIV sample, 167 are households in which the HIV-positive individual is receiving antiretroviral (ARV) treatment at the Mosoriot HIV clinic. In the random sample, the HIV status of respondents is usually unknown, unless the respondent reported having gone for an HIV test and testing HIV-positive or negative. Finally, in the VCT sample, most respondents have tested HIV-negative. Mosoriot Rural Health Training Centre. The health centre is located approximately 25 kilometers south of Eldoret town and is the main health care provider in Kosirai Division. The health centre provides primary care services and is mainly an outpatient facility. In addition, a collaboration between Indiana University and the Moi University Faculty of Health Sciences has established an electronic medical record system (MMRS) at Mosoriot which contains a range of clinical information on all patients who visit the health centre (Hannan, et al. 2000). In 2001, this same collaboration also created the Academic Model for the Prevention and Treatment of HIV/AIDS (AMPATH). AMPATH's first rural HIV clinic was opened in Mosoriot in November 2001 (Cohen, 2004). Beginning in late-2003, the HIV clinic at Mosoriot has experienced tremendous growth, with the number of patients rising from less than 100 in 2003 to over 800 as of October 2004 (AMPATH data).
Start | End |
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2005-01 | 2005-05 |
Is signing of a confidentiality declaration required? | Confidentiality declaration text |
---|---|
yes | https://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/terms-of-use |
Markus Goldstein and Harsha Thirumurthy. Greater Eldoret Health and Development Survey (GEHDS) Round 2, 2005. Ref. KEN_2005_GEHDS_v01_M_v01_A_RUF. Dataset downloaded from http://microdata.worldbank.org on [date].
The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses
Name | Affiliation | URL |
---|---|---|
Development Economics Data Group | The World Bank | microdata.worldbank.org |
DDI_KEN_2005_GEHDS-W2_v01_EN_M_v01_A_OCS _FAO
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Office of Chief Statistician | Food and Agriculture Organization | Adoption of metadata for FAM |
Akiko Sagesaka | The World Bank | Documentation of the DDI |
Olivier Dupriez | The World Bank | Documentation of the DDI |
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