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Does digital infrastructure improve public Health? A quasi-natural experiment based on China's Broadband policy

Yiwei Liu, Keshan Liu, XiangLin Zhang, Qiuyue Guo

2024Social Science & Medicine48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study proposed a scheme for improving people's health from the perspective of digital infrastructure construction. We used the China Family Panel Studies conducted between 2010 and 2020 and the digital infrastructure construction marked by the Broadband China policy between 2014 and 2016 as a quasi-natural experiment. We adopted the multi-time difference-in-differences method to identify the causal relationship between digital infrastructure and people's health. We found that digital infrastructure construction significantly improved people's health, and the effect was more prominent among young and middle-aged residents and those with less than a university education. Moreover, digital infrastructure construction improved the utilization of medical services, helped residents develop healthy lifestyles, and increased people's health investments. Additionally, digital infrastructure reduced health inequality among people and promoted health equity. The findings could guide future policies to improve people's health and well-being.

Topics & Concepts

ChinaDigital healthEquity (law)Natural experimentPublic healthBroadbandInequalityBusinessHealth policyEnvironmental healthDigital divideEconomic growthPolitical scienceMedicineTelecommunicationsInformation and Communications TechnologyEngineeringHealth careEconomicsNursingLawMathematicsPathologyMathematical analysisMobile Health and mHealth ApplicationsHealth disparities and outcomesTechnology Use by Older Adults