@misc{10481/86598, year = {2022}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/10481/86598}, abstract = {Using data from a medical intervention in Uganda, this paper estimates the health and economic impacts of providing orthotic equipment to adults with lower limb disabilities. We examine changes to: (i) functional mobility and (ii) labour market outcomes, including type of employment and monthly earnings. One year after the intervention, the effects are noticeably gendered; males exhibit an improvement in their level of functional mobility, while females face little change or a reduction in their levels. In terms of labour market outcomes, for males the intervention leads to an increase in monthly earnings, which is partly due to a switch from self- to wage employment. Effects on female labour market outcomes generate more nuanced results. Earnings increase for women, although the overall effect is much smaller. Taking into account the intensity of equipment use, our Wald estimates reveal larger marginal effects on both mobility and earnings.}, publisher = {Taylor & Francis}, title = {Disability in Uganda: a medical intervention to measure gendered impacts on functional independence and labour-market outcomes}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1080/13600818.2021.1959539}, author = {Abubakar, Aisha and Bridges, Sarah and Gaggero, Alessio and Owens, Trudy}, }