We propose to evaluate the impact of a unique anti-poverty program in Mexico on the health and cognitive development of young children. The program, PROGRESA, combines a traditional cash transfer program with financial incentives for families to invest in the human capital (health, education and nutrition) of their children, and thereby break the intergenerational transmission of poverty. To receive the cash transfers, pregnant women must obtain prenatal care and nutrition supplements, children age 0-5 must obtain well-baby care and participate in growth monitoring and nutrition supplement programs, and families must participate in health nutrition and hygiene education programs. Our analysis will take advantage of a randomized controlled design. In 1998, 506 villages were randomly assigned to control and treatment groups. Eligible households in treatment villages received benefits immediately, while benefits for eligible households in control villages were postponed until after the year 2000. A pre-intervention baseline survey of approximately 19,000 households with over 95,000 individuals and four follow-up surveys (at six month intervals) of the same households were conducted over the two-year experimental period. We propose to conduct a follow-up survey of the same households in 2003. This follow-up survey will be three years after the experiment ended and it will include biomedical measures of child health status and of cognitive development. We will use this unparalleled experiment to examine the following specific questions for children who were age 0-3 at baseline and born during the experimental period: 1. Did PROGRESA improve child health, nutrition and cognitive development? 2. Are the observed differentials sustained 3 years after the enrollment of all children into PROGRESA 3. Could the same results have been achieved through just cash transfers with the requirements for care and monitoring, but without the nutrition supplements?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01HD040864-01
Application #
6360255
Study Section
Social Sciences, Nursing, Epidemiology and Methods 4 (SNEM)
Program Officer
King, Rosalind B
Project Start
2001-09-26
Project End
2005-08-31
Budget Start
2001-09-26
Budget End
2002-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$447,891
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Berkeley
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
094878337
City
Berkeley
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94704
Fleischer, N L; Fernald, L C H; Hubbard, A E (2010) Estimating the potential impacts of intervention from observational data: methods for estimating causal attributable risk in a cross-sectional analysis of depressive symptoms in Latin America. J Epidemiol Community Health 64:16-21
Fernald, Lia C H; Gunnar, Megan R (2009) Poverty-alleviation program participation and salivary cortisol in very low-income children. Soc Sci Med 68:2180-9
Fernald, Lia C H; Gertler, Paul J; Neufeld, Lynnette M (2008) Role of cash in conditional cash transfer programmes for child health, growth, and development: an analysis of Mexico's Oportunidades. Lancet 371:828-37
Fernald, Lia C H; Burke, Heather M; Gunnar, Megan R (2008) Salivary cortisol levels in children of low-income women with high depressive symptomatology. Dev Psychopathol 20:423-36
Fleischer, Nancy L; Fernald, Lia C; Hubbard, Alan E (2007) Depressive symptoms in low-income women in rural Mexico. Epidemiology 18:678-85