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The polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the DHS index: Addressing the urban bias

BACKGROUND: The DHS wealth index − based on a statistical technique known as principal component analysis − is used extensively in mainstream surveys and epidemiological studies to assign individuals to wealth categories from information collected on common assets and household characteristics. Sinc...

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Autores principales: Martel, Pierre, Mbofana, Francisco, Cousens, Simon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Society of Global Health 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7897450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33643634
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.11.04003
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author Martel, Pierre
Mbofana, Francisco
Cousens, Simon
author_facet Martel, Pierre
Mbofana, Francisco
Cousens, Simon
author_sort Martel, Pierre
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The DHS wealth index − based on a statistical technique known as principal component analysis − is used extensively in mainstream surveys and epidemiological studies to assign individuals to wealth categories from information collected on common assets and household characteristics. Since its development in the late nineties, the index has established itself as a standard and, due to its ease of use, has led to a large and welcome increase in the analysis of inequalities. The index is, however, known to present some serious limitations, one being a bias towards patterns of urban wealth: the so-called “urban bias”. METHODS: We use 10 data sets − 5 MICS (Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey), 4 DHS (Demographic and Health Survey) and one HBS (Household Budget Survey) − to demonstrate that urban bias continues to be a prominent and worrying feature of the wealth index, even after several methodological changes implemented in recent years to try to reduce it. We then propose and investigate an approach to improve the performance of the index and reduce the urban bias. This approach involves the use of ordinal rather than dummy variables, of a polychoric instead of a product-moment correlation matrix, and the use of two principal components rather than one. These approaches are used jointly to produce the polychoric dual-component wealth index (P2C). RESULTS: The P2C index enables a larger proportion of the variance of the asset variables to be accounted for, results in all assets contributing positively to the wealth score, exploits added analytical power from ordinal variables, and incorporates the extra dimension of wealth expressed by the second principal component. It results in a better representation of typically rural characteristics of wealth and leads to the identification of more plausible distributions of both the urban and rural populations across wealth quintiles, which are closer to expenditure quintiles than the standard DHS index. CONCLUSIONS: The P2C wealth index can be easily applied to mainstream surveys, such as the MICS and DHS, and to epidemiological studies; it yields more credible distributions of rural and urban subpopulations across wealth quintiles. It is proposed as an alternative to the DHS wealth index.
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spelling pubmed-78974502021-02-25 The polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the DHS index: Addressing the urban bias Martel, Pierre Mbofana, Francisco Cousens, Simon J Glob Health Articles BACKGROUND: The DHS wealth index − based on a statistical technique known as principal component analysis − is used extensively in mainstream surveys and epidemiological studies to assign individuals to wealth categories from information collected on common assets and household characteristics. Since its development in the late nineties, the index has established itself as a standard and, due to its ease of use, has led to a large and welcome increase in the analysis of inequalities. The index is, however, known to present some serious limitations, one being a bias towards patterns of urban wealth: the so-called “urban bias”. METHODS: We use 10 data sets − 5 MICS (Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey), 4 DHS (Demographic and Health Survey) and one HBS (Household Budget Survey) − to demonstrate that urban bias continues to be a prominent and worrying feature of the wealth index, even after several methodological changes implemented in recent years to try to reduce it. We then propose and investigate an approach to improve the performance of the index and reduce the urban bias. This approach involves the use of ordinal rather than dummy variables, of a polychoric instead of a product-moment correlation matrix, and the use of two principal components rather than one. These approaches are used jointly to produce the polychoric dual-component wealth index (P2C). RESULTS: The P2C index enables a larger proportion of the variance of the asset variables to be accounted for, results in all assets contributing positively to the wealth score, exploits added analytical power from ordinal variables, and incorporates the extra dimension of wealth expressed by the second principal component. It results in a better representation of typically rural characteristics of wealth and leads to the identification of more plausible distributions of both the urban and rural populations across wealth quintiles, which are closer to expenditure quintiles than the standard DHS index. CONCLUSIONS: The P2C wealth index can be easily applied to mainstream surveys, such as the MICS and DHS, and to epidemiological studies; it yields more credible distributions of rural and urban subpopulations across wealth quintiles. It is proposed as an alternative to the DHS wealth index. International Society of Global Health 2021-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7897450/ /pubmed/33643634 http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.11.04003 Text en Copyright © 2021 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Articles
Martel, Pierre
Mbofana, Francisco
Cousens, Simon
The polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the DHS index: Addressing the urban bias
title The polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the DHS index: Addressing the urban bias
title_full The polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the DHS index: Addressing the urban bias
title_fullStr The polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the DHS index: Addressing the urban bias
title_full_unstemmed The polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the DHS index: Addressing the urban bias
title_short The polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the DHS index: Addressing the urban bias
title_sort polychoric dual-component wealth index as an alternative to the dhs index: addressing the urban bias
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7897450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33643634
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.11.04003
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