๐ Read the full paper:
ritikasethi.com/assets/mishr...
๐ฎ Explore our interactive app to visualize the findings:
mishradibya.com/pmbjp/
Feedback welcome! ๐ฉ
#HealthEconomics #DevelopmentEconomics #EconomicsOfEducation ๐
๐ Read the full paper:
ritikasethi.com/assets/mishr...
๐ฎ Explore our interactive app to visualize the findings:
mishradibya.com/pmbjp/
Feedback welcome! ๐ฉ
#HealthEconomics #DevelopmentEconomics #EconomicsOfEducation ๐
8/ Conclusion:
Affordable menstrual products drive cascading benefits for health and education. ๐ฑ
Tackling infrastructure gaps and cultural barriers can amplify these impacts. ๐ ๏ธ
7/ Policy Implications:
๐ Align menstrual health programs with waste management policies.
๐ Target areas with shared toilets/crowded housing.
๐ Address cultural barriers to increase mobility and access.
6/ Spatial Insights:
Pharmacies near hospitals ๐ฅ & markets ๐ช had higher adoption rates, showcasing spatial complementarities.
Visibility & routine access matter, but underserved areas may still face unmet demand. ๐ฆ
5/ Barriers to Adoption:
๐ฎ Waste Management: Inadequate disposal systems hinder transition from cloth to pads.
๐ช Privacy: Women in crowded/shared spaces are more likely to adopt disposable products.
๐ถ Travel Autonomy: Cultural & safety barriers limit womenโs mobility to access products.
4/ Key Results:
Access to subsidized sanitary napkins:
๐น Increased pad usage by 15% ๐ฉน
๐น Prolonged schooling by 8 months (~6%) ๐ซ
๐น Improved learning outcomes by 2% ๐ง
3/ Methodology:
Using doubly-robust difference-in-differences, we studied how proximity to pharmacies affects:
โ
Menstrual hygiene (shift from cloth to pads)
โ
Educational outcomes (enrollment, learning levels) ๐
2/ Data Sources:
We compiled a rich dataset:
๐ Administrative records of generic pharmacies
๐ Health & education surveys
๐๏ธ Village infrastructure surveys
๐บ๏ธ Spatial API for amenity mapping
1/ Policy Context:
India's Jan Aushadhi program offers sanitary napkins at highly subsidized rates (~โน1/pad) via generic pharmacies. Launched in 2018, this initiative aims to tackle period poverty and improve health and education outcomes. ๐ฅ๐
Pharmacy Proximity & Period Poverty: My working paper with @rsritikasethi.bsky.social (on the #EconJobMarket! ๐) investigates the impact of subsidized menstrual products in India on womenโs health ๐ฉธ and education ๐, using nationwide data on generic pharmacies. A thread on key findings: ๐งต๐