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CHLHHWORKLOUD (CHLHHWORKLOUD)
Child's work requires exposure to loud noise or vibration

Codes and Frequencies



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Description

CHLHHWORKLOUD indicates whether the child household member selected for the child labor module (CHLHHINDEX) recently did work requiring exposure to loud noises or vibration.

This variable comes from a series of questions about possible hazardous conditions in children's work. If a "Yes" response was given for one of these hazardous conditions, questions about other hazards were not asked. Accordingly, the sum of all cases with "Yes" responses to any hazard identifies the total number of working children exposed to any (specified) hazard. This approach avoids double-counting working children but means one cannot identify multiple hazards in children's employment. For example, if a child is initially identified as carrying heavy loads, one cannot learn whether he or she is also exposed to loud noises.

The information in CHLHHWORKLOUD is taken from the household record and applies to regular household residents, not temporary visitors. Researchers may wish to exclude visitors using the RESIDENT variable (with visitors coded "2") when women, children, or births are the unit of analysis, and using the HHRESIDENT variable when household members are the unit of analysis.

Comparability — Index

GENERAL
Angola

Comparability

Apart from slight universe differences, CHLHHWORKLOUD is comparable across samples.

Comparability - Standard DHS

CHLHHWORKLOUD is not included in any phase of the standard DHS household questionnaire, but it is included the standard child labor module for Phase VII.

Comparability — Angola [top]

The 2015 Angola survey does not follow the same skip-pattern as the majority of samples. The questionnaire asks about each potential working hazard for all children included in the child labor module who worked in the past week, regardless of whether previous hazards had already been identified.

Universe

  • Angola 2015: Women age 15-49 in households with a child age 5-17 and in which the child performed some type of paid or unpaid work or business in the past week.
  • Benin 2017: Women age 15-49 households with a child age 5-17 selected for the child labor module and in which the child performed some type of agricultural, business, artisanal, sales, or other work in the past week, and whose work did not require carrying heavy loads, using dangerous tools or machinery, exposure to dust, smoke, or gas, or exteme temperatures or humidity.
  • Burundi 2016: Women age 15-49 in households with a child age 5-17 selected for the child labor module and in which the child performed some type of agricultural, business, artisanal, sales, or other work in the past week, and whose work did not require carrying heavy loads, using unsafe tools, or exposure to dust, smoke, gas or temperature extremes.
  • Chad 2014: Women age 15-49 in households with a resident child age 5-17 selected for the child labor module and in which the child performed some type of agricultural, business, artisanal, sales, or other work in the past week, and whose work did not require carrying heavy loads, using unsafe tools, or exposure to dust, smoke, gas or temperature extremes, in households not selected for the men's survey.
  • Congo (Democratic Republic) 2013: Women age 15-49 in households with a child age 5-17 selected for the child labor module and in which the child performed some type of agricultural, business, artisanal, sales, or other work in the past week, and whose work did not require carrying heavy loads, using unsafe tools, or exposure to dust, smoke, gas or temperature extremes, in households not selected for the men's survey.
  • Egypt 2014: Ever-married women age 15-49 in households with a child age 5-17 selected for the child labor module and in which the child's work did not require carrying heavy loads, using unsafe tools, or exposure to dust, smoke, gas or temperature extremes.
  • Senegal 2014: Women age 15-49 in households with a child age 5-17 and in which the child performed some type of agricultural, business, artisanal, sales, or other work in the past week, and whose work did not require carrying heavy loads, using unsafe tools, or exposure to dust, smoke, gas or temperature extremes.
  • Senegal 2015: Women age 15-49 in households with a resident child age 5-17 and in which the child performed some type of agricultural, business, artisanal, sales, or other work in the past week, and whose work did not require carrying heavy loads, using unsafe tools, or exposure to dust, smoke, gas or temperature extremes.
  • Senegal 2016: Women age 15-49 in households with a resident child age 5-17 and in which the child performed some type of agricultural, business, artisanal, sales, or other work in the past week, and whose work did not require carrying heavy loads, using unsafe tools, or exposure to dust, smoke, gas or temperature extremes.
  • Togo 2013: Women age 15-49 in households with a child age 5-17 selected for the child labor module and in which the child performed some type of agricultural, business, artisanal, sales, or other work in the past week, and whose work did not require carrying heavy loads, using unsafe tools, or exposure to dust, smoke, gas or temperature extremes.
  • Angola: 2015-W, 2015-C, 2015-B, 2015-M, 2015-H, 2015-W
  • Benin: 2017-W, 2017-C, 2017-B, 2017-M, 2017-H, 2017-W
  • Burundi: 2016-W, 2016-C, 2016-B, 2016-M, 2016-H, 2016-W
  • Chad: 2014-W, 2014-C, 2014-B, 2014-M, 2014-H
  • Congo (Democratic Republic): 2013-W, 2013-C, 2013-B, 2013-M, 2013-H
  • Egypt: 2014-H, 2014-B, 2014-C, 2014-W, 2014-W
  • Senegal: 2014-B, 2014-M, 2014-H, 2014-W, 2014-C, 2014-W, 2015-H, 2015-W, 2015-B, 2015-M, 2015-W, 2015-C, 2016-M, 2016-H, 2016-B, 2016-C, 2016-W, 2016-W
  • Togo: 2013-W, 2013-C, 2013-B, 2013-H, 2013-M