Nigeria - Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey MICS3 (2007), Nigeria, Third round
Reference ID | NGA-NBS-MICS3 2007-v1.2 |
Year | 2007 |
Country | Nigeria |
Producer(s) | National Bureau of Statistics [nbs] - Federal Government of Nigeria |
Sponsor(s) | Fedral Government of Nigeria - FG - Funding United Nation Children Educational Fund - UNICEF - Funding National Bureau of Statistics - NBS - Funding |
Metadata | Download DDI Download RDF |
Created on | Oct 18, 2010 |
Last modified | Dec 02, 2013 |
Page views | 601940 |
Downloads | 35070 |
Should teacher with hiv/aids be allowed to teach in school
(Ha10)
File: MICS3 Women data
File: MICS3 Women data
Overview
Type:
Continuous Format: numeric Width: 1 Decimals: 0 | Valid cases: 17742 (18977.4) Invalid: 9351 (5588.8) Minimum: 1 Maximum: 8 |
Categories
Value | Category | Cases | Weighted | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Yes | 8888 | 9592 | 50.5% |
2 | No | 7200 | 7875 | 41.5% |
8 | Dk/not sure/depends | 1653 | 1510 | 8.0% |
9 | Missing | 0 | 0 | 0.0% |
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.
Questions and instructions
HA10. If a female teacher has the AIDS virus but is not sick, should she be allowed to continue teaching in school?
Yes 1
No 2
DK/not sure/depends 8
Yes 1
No 2
DK/not sure/depends 8
If a school learns that a female teacher has the AIDS virus, but she is not sick, how should the school handle this information? Should the teacher be allowed to continue teaching at the school, or should she be removed from her teaching position? We are not asking about whether or not a teacher has actually been asked to leave a teaching position, but rather, what is the respondent's opinion about how such a case should be handled; should the teacher be allowed to continue teaching?