| Literature DB >> 26208930 |
Xi Chen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blood collection following nonstandard operations largely increases the risks of infectious diseases through cross-contamination. Commercial plasma donation and the resulting HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C epidemics in central China in the 1990s killed more than one million people. Many blood banks have since moved to more remote southwest provinces, which have become new suppliers of blood plasma.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26208930 PMCID: PMC4502079 DOI: 10.1186/s13561-014-0030-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ Rev ISSN: 2191-1991
Income, poverty, income inequality and plasma donation compensation (2004–2009)
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| Main sources of income (percent) | |||
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| 33.3 | 31.4 | 33.1 |
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| 8.1 | 6.8 | 6.9 |
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| 24.0 | 30.0 | 23.8 |
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| 8.0 | 13.1 | 8.8 |
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| 2.8 | 2.0 | 5.4 |
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| 5.6 | 9.1 | 8.2 |
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| 20.9 | 4.3 | 6.1 |
| Average annual plasma donation compensation per capita (CNY) | 294.1 | 78.6 | 174.9 |
| Cash compensation (or nutrition subsidy) in CNY for plasma donation (per 580 cc) | 80 | 80 | 150 |
| # households without plasma donor | 552 | 749 | 749 |
| # households with one plasma donor | 235 | 66 | 97 |
| # households with two or more plasma donors | 15 | 18 | 26 |
| Per capita annual income (CNY) | 1404.7 | 1817.3 | 2855.6 |
| Income inequality (Gini) | 43.1 | 48.2 | 55.2 |
| Income inequality excluding plasma donation (Gini) | 46.3 | 49.0 | 56.6 |
| Income below poverty line of 892 CNY (%) | 37.3 | 36.3 | 22.4 |
| Income below poverty line of US $1.25 per day using 2005 PPP (%) | 71.3 | 64.1 | 52.7 |
Source: Author’s three wave Guizhou survey data.
Notes: 1 USD = 6.2 CNY, PPP purchasing power parity. The 2005 PPP exchange rate is at the “China-rural” level. See http://iresearch.worldbank.org/PovcalNet/jsp/index.jsp. The Poverty lines for 2004–2009 are adjusted according to the published annual inflation rate in various issues of China Statistic Year Book, published by China’s National Bureau of Statistics. The poverty line of 892 CNY per year in terms of PPP equals US $0.61 per day.
Socioeconomic determinants of engagement in commercial plasma donation
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| Per capita income (log) | −0.042*** | (0.014) | −0.282*** | (0.098) | −0.072*** | (0.021) |
| Cadre and party membership status (dummy) | −0.05 | (0.045) | −0.429 | (0.289) | −0.111** | (0.056) |
| Household size | 0.026** | (0.011) | 0.134* | (0.076) | 0.033** | (0.015) |
| Year of education | 0.004 | (0.003) | 0.026 | (0.023) | 0.005 | (0.004) |
| Ethnicity status (dummy) | −0.164*** | (0.061) | −1.100*** | (0.394) | −0.299*** | (0.075) |
| Share of elderly | −0.062 | (0.079) | −0.525 | (0.581) | −0.139 | (0.106) |
| Share of unmarried son | 0.180** | (0.077) | 1.234** | (0.517) | 0.204** | (0.098) |
| Ratio of farm wage to plasma compensation | −0.183 | (0.145) | −1.279 | (0.979) | −0.277 | (0.173) |
| Exposure to big diseases (dummy) | −0.051* | (0.030) | −0.328 | (0.205) | −0.033 | (0.043) |
| Exposure to livestock deaths (dummy) | −0.033 | (0.030) | −0.21 | (0.202) | −0.026 | (0.044) |
| Exposure to family member deaths (dummy) | −0.007 | (0.051) | −0.114 | (0.341) | −0.087 | (0.061) |
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| Mean per capita income (log) | −0.044 | (0.065) | −0.266 | (0.444) | 0.042 | (0.099) |
| Mean year of education | 0.008 | (0.034) | 0.046 | (0.220) | −0.008 | (0.042) |
| Mean ethnicity status | −0.122 | (0.177) | −1.189 | (1.189) | −0.125 | (0.191) |
| Mean share of elderly | 0.208 | (0.452) | 1.127 | (3.176) | 0.226 | (0.566) |
| Mean share of unmarried son | −0.397 | (0.290) | −2.814 | (2.036) | −0.471 | (0.431) |
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| Yes | Yes | Yes | |||
| N | 2507 | 2507 | 2507 | |||
Notes: Robust standard errors are in the parentheses. *Significant at 10%; **Significant at 5%; ***Significant at 1%.
Summary statistics on self-rated health status and hepatitis infection
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| 0.144 | 1.070 |
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| 0.274 | 1.099 |
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| 0 | 0 |
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| 1.575 | 0.929 |
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| 1.154 | 0.689 |
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| 0.533 | 0.516 |
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| 0.200 | 0.837 |
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| 0.182 | 0.603 |
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| 0.083 | 0.289 |
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| 1.688 | 0.830 |
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| 1.607 | 1.005 |
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| 0.016 | 0.126 |
Notes: Both absolute self-rating and relative self-rating of health status range from 1–5. 1 corresponds to the healthiest status, while 5 indicates the least healthy status. Relative self-rating evaluates health status relative to peers of similar age.
Blood plasma donation, individual self-rated health status and hepatitis rate (individual fixed effect estimations, 2006 and 2009)
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| 0.823*** | 0.518** | 0.192*** |
| (0.258) | (0.227) | (0.021) | |
| Control variables | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| N | 2775 | 3098 | 3189 |
| R2 within | 0.079 | 0.109 | 0.085 |
Notes: Robust standard errors are in the parentheses. **Significant at 5%; ***Significant at 1%. Both absolute self-rating and relative self-rating of health status range from 1–5. 1 corresponds to the healthiest status, while 5 indicates the least healthy status. The set of control variables is the same as Table 2. The difference in sample sizes between two regressions is due to missing values in self-rated health status. Fortunately, those with missing values in self-rated health status are no different from other respondents with regard to the set of socioeconomic covariates.