Abstract

Civil registration of vital events such as deaths and births is a key part of the process of securing rights and benefits for individuals worldwide. It also enables the production of vital statistics for local planning of social services. In many low- and lower-middle-income countries, however, civil registration and vital statistics (CRVS) systems do not adequately register significant numbers of births and, especially, deaths. In this study, we aim to estimate the completeness of adult death registration (for age 15 and older) in the Matlab health and demographic surveillance system (HDSS) area in Bangladesh and to identify reasons for (not) registering deaths in the national CRVS system. We conducted a sample survey of 2538 households and recorded 571 adult deaths that had occurred in the 3 years preceding the survey. Only 17% of these deaths were registered in the national CRVS system, with large gender differences in registration rates (male = 26% vs. female = 5%). Respondents who reported that a recent death in the household was registered indicated that the primary reasons for registration were to secure an inheritance and to access social services. The main reasons cited for not registering a death were lack of knowledge about CRVS and not perceiving the benefits of death registration. Information campaigns to raise awareness of death registration, as well as stronger incentives to register deaths, may be needed to improve the completeness of death registration in Bangladesh.

Highlights

  • Civil registration is an administrative process of continuous recording of vital events: births, deaths, and marriages

  • A well-functioning civil registration and vital statistics (CRVS) system allow for the production of timely age, sex, and cause-specific mortality statistics (AbouZahr, De Savigny, Mikkelsen, Setel, Lozano, & Lopez, 2015)

  • The primary goal of this study was to compare survey data on adult mortality generated by siblings’ survival histories to records of deaths collected by the Matlab Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) area (Alam et al, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

Civil registration is an administrative process of continuous recording of vital events: births, deaths, and marriages. In many countries following a death, for example, family members of the deceased are required by law to visit an administrative office to report the death and provide information about it. This includes the particulars of the deceased (such as his or her name) as well as demographic information about the person. CRVS systems provide numerators for important indicators of progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals, such as the neonatal mortality rate and maternal mortality ratio (United Nations Statistics Division, 2016) These data help governments formulate policies, implement population health programs, and evaluate the effects of these actions. Such data are extensively used in high-income and some uppermiddle-income countries to measure monthly or weekly levels of excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic (Aburto et al, 2021; Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC)., 2021)

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