Published April 2024 | Version v1
Thesis Open

Delivering Care at the Hands of Crime: Exploring the Nexus of Security Concerns and Maternal & Child Mortality in Nigeria

Creators

  • 1. University of Chicago

Contributors

Committee member:

Description

From kidnapping for ransom to political corruption, Nigeria is a nation grappling with great insecurity. This has an impact on vulnerable populations, such as women and children. Few studies have documented the connection between insecurity and maternal and child mortality in Nigeria despite the rising number of kidnappings and other crimes in the last decade. In this paper, I identify the avenues through which security concerns detrimentally impact child and maternal mortality in Nigeria. I interviewed 10 Nigerian citizens to document the societal impact of growing crime and their opinions on governmental efforts in handling insecurity, maternal mortality, and child mortality. I also conducted an empirical analysis to reveal a strong, positive correlation between an insecurity proxy variable and maternal healthcare. From my qualitative interviews, I found that transportation, education, inadequate healthcare infrastructure/resources, and socioeconomic inequality were key intermediate factors that contributed to the vulnerability of women and children. Based on these findings, I recommend counseling for youth and women, macroeconomic reform, secure medical transportation, and lobbying as a way to incorporate the common Nigerian citizen into the nation's fight against mortality, particularly among mothers and children.

Notes

This Honors thesis has been reviewed and recommended by Public Policy Studies faculty.

Files

Inyang, Ime - Delivering Care at the Hands of Crime_ Exploring the Nexus of Security Concerns and Maternal & Child Mortality in Nigeria.pdf

Additional details

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Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:12259

UChicago Information

Division(s)
The College
Department(s)
Public Policy Theses