Dimensions of Social Life 1987
DOI: 10.1515/9783110846850.305
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The Impact of Social and Economic Development on Mortality: a Comparative Study of Kerala and West Bengal

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Cited by 26 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…Thirdly, one may ask whether the PPCS palliative care policy was made possible only thanks to the long tradition of social achievements of Kerala, where public action brought changes in the domains of land reform, health, education, and the public distribution system. Mass literacy and high social and political consciousness fuelled the demand for health services, and increased citizens' awareness about the need and right to use medical facilities [23,24]. In this environment, the PPCS policy developed as part of a broader social movement, and not as a «stand-alone» service for the dying.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thirdly, one may ask whether the PPCS palliative care policy was made possible only thanks to the long tradition of social achievements of Kerala, where public action brought changes in the domains of land reform, health, education, and the public distribution system. Mass literacy and high social and political consciousness fuelled the demand for health services, and increased citizens' awareness about the need and right to use medical facilities [23,24]. In this environment, the PPCS policy developed as part of a broader social movement, and not as a «stand-alone» service for the dying.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Demographers and development scholars have studied Kerala's development trajectory to understand how high educational and health outcomes are possible at lower levels of economic development (Caldwell, 1986;Krishnan, 1976;Nag, 1984;Nair, 1974;Ratcliffe, 1978;Sen, 1999;Zachariah, 1984;Zachariah et al, 1994). Kerala's per capita income was approximately USD $275 in the late 1990s while the state's life expectancy was 74 years for women and 69 years for men, and the state's infant mortality rate was 14 out of 1000 live births (Nath et al, 1998).…”
Section: Fertility Decline In India and Keralamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since 1911-1920in Kerala, and 1963 in Sri Lanka, life expectancy continues to increase with a female advantage (Nag 1985 Although some authors attribute these health achievements largely to welfare inputs, such as health care and female education (Panikar andSoman 1984, pp. 143-149, Fernando et al 2003), others emphasize the role of agrarian reforms, politicization of the masses and public action (Ramachandran 1996, Casiander 2000).…”
Section: Overview Of Women's Health Achievementsmentioning
confidence: 99%