Abstract

ObjectivesThis study was conducted to evaluate the performance of World Health Organisation (WHO) verbal autopsy tool in determining major causes of neonatal deaths.MethodsFrom a tertiary care hospital and a government multispecialty hospital, the attending paediatricians ascertained a clinical cause of death for 371 neonatal deaths. Trained field workers conducted verbal autopsy (VA) interviews. Two independent paediatricians, who had no access to the clinical information, assigned cause of death as per verbal autopsy. Analysis was based on 313 cases in which both clinical diagnosis and VA diagnosis was obtained.FindingsAs per the clinical diagnosis, four most common causes of neonatal deaths were sepsis (29.1%), preterm birth (27.8%), birth asphyxia (27.2%), and congenital anomalies (11.5%). Cause specific mortality fractions by VA diagnosis were statistically similar to those obtained by clinical diagnosis except for birth asphyxia (16.3%). Diagnostic accuracy of verbal autopsy diagnosis against clinical diagnosis ranged from 78% to 92% in ascertaining different underlying causes of death. Area under the Receiver-Operator Characteristics curve (95% confidence interval) was 0.75 (0.69–0.80) for sepsis, 0.74 (0.68–0.80) for preterm birth, 0.73 (0.65–0.82) for congenital anomaly and 0.70 (0.64–0.75) for birth asphyxia. Kappa for all four causes was moderate (0.46–0.55).InterpretationThe WHO verbal autopsy tools can provide reasonably good estimates of predominant causes of neonatal deaths in countries where neonatal mortality is high. Caution is required to interpret cause specific mortality fraction (CSMF) for birth asphyxia by VA because it is likely to be an underestimate.

Highlights

  • About 4 million neonatal deaths occur every year [1]

  • Final analysis is based on these 313 cases in whom verbal autopsy (VA) was performed

  • Key parameters of these children in whom VA was done were compared with those where VA could not be done to rule out any systematic difference between the two groups

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Summary

Introduction

About 4 million neonatal deaths occur every year [1]. Direct causes of neonatal deaths are estimated to be preterm birth, severe infections, and birth asphyxia [2]. Most of these deaths occur in developing countries. There is dearth of reliable information on causes of these deaths through routine vital registration systems. Most deaths in these countries occur at home, hospital based medical certification of death is not available. This has important bearing on resource allocation and strategic planning [2;3]

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