HIAS Health invited Prof. Josselin Thuilliez, the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), France, as a guest speaker and held its 23rd regular seminar on Tuesday, February 6, 2018. The seminar was co-hosted by the School of International and Public Policy and the International Division of Hitotsubashi University as the 23rd HIAS Health Regular Seminar/Public Economics Work Shop/International Seminar.
 
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Prof. Josselin Thuilliez giving a presentationWith members of HIAS Health; from left, Prof. Shinji Yamashige, Prof. Motohiro Sato, Prof. Josselin Thuilliez, Dr. Ying Yao, Prof. Yoko Ibuka, Prof. Ryota Nakamura, Dr. Tamahi Kato (Yamauchi)
 
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Date & timeFebruary 6 (Tue), 2018 17:30-19:00
VenueHIAS Seminar Room (Faculty Building II, Room 517), Kunitachi West Campus, Hitotsubashi University
SpeakerProf. Josselin Thuilliez, Research Professor, CNRS at Sorbonne Economic Center (CES, University of Paris 1, Pantheon Sorbonne), France
Title"Information, learning and health technology adoption in the short and long run: Evidence from a field experiment in Burkina Faso."
AbstractMosquito nets are now largely provided free of charge in most parts of Sub-Saharan Africa. In this context, the effect of information on the use of nets has been relatively neglected. Information is a source of market failure and the use of preventive health products may vary depending on the availability of information on the underlying cause of illness or nuisance. Several studies have also shown that usage may decline after distribution. This paper use the results from a two-stage mobile health randomized experiment, providing health messages with different frequencies, supports - oral or written - and contents - vertical or horizontal. We show that type, frequency and content matter. Reduced form estimates show that the provision of seasonal information for a subset of households increases short and long-run usage rates among information recipients and their neighbours. We provide several explanations through social learning effects, heterogeneous externalities and motivations.
LanguageEnglish
Organized bySchool of International and Public Policy, Hitotsubashi University
Research Center for Health Policy and Economics, Hitotsubashi Institute for Advanced Study (HIAS), Hitotsubashi University