posted on 2024-10-02, 18:22authored byBruce Wydick, Gianna Camacho, Patrizio Piraino
<p dir="ltr">We study the impact of clubfoot disability and its treatment on multiple dimensions of human
flourishing among children. Working with Hope Walks, a faith-based development organization
that funds clubfoot interventions in numerous countries, we use a quasi difference-indifferences
approach on data collected from 564 children in Ethiopia. To generate counterfactuals to
clubfoot status and treatment, we use outcomes from nearest-age siblings of children born with
clubfoot nested within a family-level fixed effect. We find that clubfoot status (early treatment)
results in a disability (restoration) of -1.44σ (0.91σ) in physical mobility, -1.17σ (0.79σ) in
mental health, -1.07σ (0.64σ) in social inclusion, -0.48σ (0.98σ) in an education index, -0.76σ
(0.42σ) in religious faith, and -1.19σ (0.79σ) in an aggregate index of human flourishing (all p <
0.05). We attribute the large, broad, and significant impacts from clubfoot treatment to (i) a
highly effective medical intervention that is (ii) carried out in an impoverished setting with
scarce existing support for children born with disabilities, which (3) generates spillover effects
into multiple facets of human flourishing.</p>