Alternative approaches for creating a wealth index: the case of Mozambique

Kexin Xie(Virginia Tech), Achla Marathe(Biocom), Xinwei Deng(Virginia Tech), Paula Ruiz-Castillo(Barcelona Institute for Global Health), Saimado Imputiua(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Eldo Elobolobo(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Victor Mutepa(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Mussa Sale(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Patricia Nicolas(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Júlia Montañà(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Edgar Jamisse(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Humberto Munguambe(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Felisbela Materrula(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Aina Casellas(Barcelona Institute for Global Health), Regina Rabinovich(Harvard University), Francisco Saúte(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Carlos Chaccour(Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red), Charfudin Sacoor(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Cassidy Rist(Virginia–Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine)
BMJ Global Health
August 1, 2023
Cited by 22Open Access
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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The wealth index is widely used as a proxy for a household's socioeconomic position (SEP) and living standard. This work constructs a wealth index for the Mopeia district in Mozambique using data collected in year 2021 under the BOHEMIA (Broad One Health Endectocide-based Malaria Intervention in Africa) project. METHODS: We evaluate the performance of three alternative approaches against the Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) method based wealth index: feature selection principal components analysis (PCA), sparse PCA and robust PCA. The internal coherence between four wealth indices is investigated through statistical testing. Validation and an evaluation of the stability of the wealth index are performed with additional household income data from the BOHEMIA Health Economics Survey and the 2018 Malaria Indicator Survey data in Mozambique. RESULTS: The Spearman's rank correlation between wealth index ventiles from four methods is over 0.98, indicating a high consistency in results across methods. Wealth rankings and households' income show a strong concordance with the area under the curve value of ~0.7 in the receiver operating characteristic analysis. The agreement between the alternative wealth indices and the DHS wealth index demonstrates the stability in rankings from the alternative methods. CONCLUSIONS: This study creates a wealth index for Mopeia, Mozambique, and shows that DHS method based wealth index is an appropriate proxy for the SEP in low-income regions. However, this research recommends feature selection PCA over the DHS method since it uses fewer asset indicators and constructs a high-quality wealth index.


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