Codes and Frequencies
Description
ATRPRIVHOS indicates whether, in response to an open-ended question, the woman reported a private hospital, clinic, or doctor as a potential source of treatment for HIV/AIDS.
Some samples in the "ATR" series include categories that can be consolidated into a single response. IPUMS-DHS uses supplemental programming to combine these responses in a standard variable while preserving the separate responses in country-specific variables.
For example, a given sample might include multiple categories for different types of private hospitals or clinics that could be combined to create a more comprehensive response category. See Comparability for more information on the specific categories combined in this variable.
Comparability — Index
GENERAL |
Chad |
Uganda |
Comparability
In addition to universe differences, ATRPRIVHOS varies slightly across samples in question wording. Most commonly, this response category is organized under the "Private Medical Sector" header and is worded as "private hospital/clinic/doctor." However, some countries diverge from this standard convention, and, in some cases, multiple categories were consolidated to form a single, more comprehensive response. Countries of particular interest are noted below.
Comparability - Standard DHS
ATRPRIVHOS is a country-specific variable, and it is not included in any phase of the standard DHS questionnaire.
Comparability — Chad [top]
For the 2004 Chad survey, under the "Private Medical Sector" header, there are two separate categories for "private hospital" and "private doctor/clinic." Because ATRPRIVHOS focuses on private hospitals, clinics, and doctors, both these responses are consolidated in ATRPRIVHOS to create a more comprehensive response category. For researchers interested in preserving these country-specific categories:
Comparability — Uganda [top]
The 2006 Uganda survey asks about known sources of ARVs (antiretroviral therapy).
Universe
- Chad 2004: Women age 15-49 who have heard of HIV/AIDS and who know HIV/AIDS can be treated.
- Sao Tome 2008: All women age 15-49.
- Uganda 2006: All women age 15-49.