Abstract

BackgroundGlobally, clinical certification of the cause of neonatal death is not commonly available in developing countries. Under such circumstances it is imperative to use available WHO verbal autopsy tool to ascertain causes of death for strategic health planning in countries where resources are limited and the burden of neonatal death is high. The study explores the diagnostic accuracy of WHO revised verbal autopsy tool for ascertaining the causes of neonatal deaths against reference standard diagnosis obtained from standardized clinical and supportive hospital data.MethodsAll neonatal deaths were recruited between August 2006 –February 2008 from two tertiary teaching hospitals in Province Sindh, Pakistan. The reference standard cause of death was established by two senior pediatricians within 2 days of occurrence of death using the International Cause of Death coding system. For verbal autopsy, trained female community health worker interviewed mother or care taker of the deceased within 2–6 weeks of death using a modified WHO verbal autopsy tool. Cause of death was assigned by 2 trained pediatricians. The performance was assessed in terms of sensitivity and specificity.ResultsOut of 626 neonatal deaths, cause-specific mortality fractions for neonatal deaths were almost similar in both verbal autopsy and reference standard diagnosis. Sensitivity of verbal autopsy was more than 93 % for diagnosing prematurity and 83.5 % for birth asphyxia. However the verbal autopsy didn’t have acceptable accuracy for diagnosing the congenital malformation 57 %. The specificity for all five major causes of neonatal deaths was greater than 90 %.ConclusionThe WHO revised verbal autopsy tool had reasonable validity in determining causes of neonatal deaths. The tool can be used in resource limited community-based settings where neonatal mortality rate is high and death certificates from hospitals are not available.

Highlights

  • Clinical certification of the cause of neonatal death is not commonly available in developing countries

  • The objective of the study was to estimate the sensitivity, specificity, level of agreement and diagnostic accuracy of revised World Health Organization (WHO) verbal autopsy tool in ascertaining the cause specific mortality fractions (CSMF) for major causes of neonatal deaths in comparison with a reference standard cause of death assigned by physician

  • Verbal autopsy could not be performed in 158 cases; only 20 families refused an interview, 10 families had migrated, 3 homes were locked while 125 provided incorrect addresses

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical certification of the cause of neonatal death is not commonly available in developing countries Under such circumstances it is imperative to use available WHO verbal autopsy tool to ascertain causes of death for strategic health planning in countries where resources are limited and the burden of neonatal death is high. A study undertaken In India found that this tool can provide reasonably good estimates of major causes of neonatal deaths in countries with high neonatal death burden [14]. This manuscript reports finding from a similar study conducted in Pakistan and adds up to the evidence base on the accuracy of the WHO neonatal VA tool in ascertaining cause of death in the developing world

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