Abstract

# Background Reliable information on causes of death to understand health priorities is rare from rural underdeveloped regions of India but is needed to direct health care response. This prompted us to study causes of death in a rural region of Gadchiroli, one of the most underdeveloped districts of India. # Methods Data on causes of death were collected from 86 villages between April 2011 and March 2013 using verbal autopsies. Two physicians independently assigned cause of death using the tenth revision of the International Classification of Disease and disagreement was resolved by a third physician. # Results There were 1599 deaths over 188,308 person years of observation. The crude death rate was 8.5 (95% confidence interval (CI)=8.1-8.9). The five leading causes of death were diseases of the circulatory system (20.8%), stroke being the leading cause (14.3%), infections and parasitic disorders (18.4%), injuries and other external causes of mortality (10%), peri-natal diseases (6.5%) and diseases of the respiratory system (6.4%). Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) accounted for 38.5%, infections and perinatal diseases for 28.3% and external causes including injuries for 10% of all deaths. # Conclusions Epidemiological transition with a shift in causes of deaths from communicable to NCDs has occurred even in a rural underdeveloped district like Gadchiroli. Public health system in rural India which focuses on infections and maternal and child health will now need to be strengthened urgently to face the triple challenge of communicable and non-communicable diseases as well as injuries.

Highlights

  • Reliable information on causes of death to understand health priorities is rare from rural underdeveloped regions of India but is needed to direct health care response

  • Public health system in rural India which focuses on infections and maternal and child health will need to be strengthened urgently to face the triple challenge of communicable and non-communicable diseases as well as injuries

  • Reliable information on the causes of death can help identify health care priorities, allocate resources as well as to design, monitor and evaluate the outcomes of healthcare interventions. 1–2 Most mortality surveillance systems in developed countries rely on medical certification

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Summary

Methods

Data on causes of death were collected from 86 villages between April 2011 and March 2013 using verbal autopsies. Two physicians independently assigned cause of death using the tenth revision of the International Classification of Disease and disagreement was resolved by a third physician. This study was conducted in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra state of India. It has a total population of 1,107,294. 13 Close to 75% of the total land of the district is covered by forest. The literacy rate of the district is 66%. Subsistence farming and farm-labor are the main occupations in the district and in 2011 the per capita annual income was Rs 33,504 (about 550 US$). The physician to population ratio in this district is about 1:5000 as against 1:1300 for the rest of India in 2011. The physician to population ratio in this district is about 1:5000 as against 1:1300 for the rest of India in 2011. 14

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