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. 2019 Feb 19;38:7. doi: 10.1186/s41043-019-0164-6

Table 5.

Effect of JGY implementation on health information

Variables (1) (2) (3)
Ever heard of HIV/AIDS Heard from TV Any other source
Post*Gujarat (JGY program effect) 0.033 (− 0.040–0.105) 0.057** (0.005–0.110) 0.001 (− 0.072–0.074)
Gujarat − 0.269*** (− 0.426 to − 0.113) 0.108 (− 0.026–0.241) − 0.153** (− 0.306 to − 0.001)
Post (interview in 2007–2008) − 0.152*** (− 0.196 to − 0.108) − 0.266*** (− 0.294 to − 0.237) 0.136*** (0.092–0.180)
Age 0.016*** (0.012–0.020) 0.001 (− 0.006–0.007) 0.013*** (0.006–0.019)
Age squared − 0.000*** (− 0.000 to − 0.000) − 0.000 (− 0.000–0.000) − 0.000*** (− 0.000 to − 0.000)
Years of schooling 0.036*** (0.035–0.038) 0.022*** (0.019–0.024) 0.007*** (0.004–0.009)
Husband’s years of schooling 0.003*** (0.002–0.004) 0.004*** (0.002–0.006) − 0.001 (− 0.002–0.000)
Age of the head − 0.000** (− 0.001 to − 0.000) − 0.000 (− 0.001–0.000) 0.000 (− 0.000–0.000)
Female head 0.011 (− 0.008–0.030) 0.014 (− 0.026–0.053) 0.017 (− 0.004–0.039)
Standard of living index 0.081*** (0.072–0.090) 0.148*** (0.135–0.161) − 0.022*** (− 0.034 to − 0.009)
Distance to nearest health facility − 0.001 (− 0.003–0.000) − 0.000 (− 0.002–0.001) 0.001 (− 0.001–0.002)
Observations 34,430 18,093 18,093

Reported coefficients are probit marginal effects. Regressions include religion and social group dummies, district fixed effects and interview year fixed effects, and district-level pre-JGY health status interacted with interview year dummies. Standard errors clustered at the district level. 95% confidence intervals in parentheses. ***p < 0.01, **p < 0.05, *p < 0.1