Login
Login

APHRC Online Microdata Library
  • Home
  • About APHRC
  • Datasets
  • Collections
  • Citations
  • Resources
  • How to use it?
  • Why sharing data?
  • Contact us
    Home / Central Data Catalog / HEALTH_AND_WELL-BEING / DDI-KEN-APHRC-INUAJAMII-2024-V1.0 / variable [F2]
Health_and_Well-Being

Can Women Self-Help Groups Improve Financial Stability and Quality of Life of Households Receiving Government Cash Transfers? Evidence from Inua Jamii-OVC program in the Slums of Nairobi, Kenya, Inua Jamii

Kenya, 2025
Health and Well-Being (HaW)
Peter Otieno
Last modified October 08, 2025 Page views 1208 Documentation in PDF Metadata DDI/XML JSON
  • Study description
  • Documentation
  • Data Description
  • Get Microdata
  • Data files
  • Inua Jamii -
    Baseline Data_1
  • IJ_endline_final_1
CSV JSON

13.2 Rate the adequacy of 13.1 access on a scale of 1-5(1 = lowest or inadequate (q13_2_3)

Data file: Inua Jamii - Baseline Data_1

Overview

vald 20
invd 631
Interval discrete
Decimal 0
Range 1 - 5

Questions and instructions

Literal question
13.2 Rate the adequacy of 13.1 access on a scale of 1-5(1 = lowest or inadequate
Categories
Value Category Cases
1 Inadequate access (Lowest) 2
10%
2 Limited access 1
5%
3 Moderate access 4
20%
4 Good access 8
40%
5 Adequate access (Highest) 5
25%
Sysmiss 631
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.
Question pretext
Access
Question post text
N/A
Interviewer instructions
N/A

Description

Text
This is the rating from question 13.1 access on a scale of 1-5
Universe
Women Caregivers

Concept

Concept
var_concept.name
N/A

others

Notes
"13.2 Rate the adequacy of 13.1 access on a scale of 1-5(1 = lowest or inadequate access 5 = highest or adequate access)"
APHRC Microdata Portal

© APHRC Microdata Portal, All Rights Reserved. Slot Online