Abstract

BackgroundThis study was one of a set of verbal autopsy investigations undertaken by the WHO/UNCEF–supported Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG) to derive direct estimates of the causes of neonatal and child deaths in high priority countries of sub–Saharan Africa. The objective of the study was to determine the cause distributions of neonatal (0–27 days) and child (1–59 months) mortality in Niger.MethodsVerbal autopsy interviews were conducted of random samples of 453 neonatal deaths and 620 child deaths from 2007 to 2010 identified by the 2011 Niger National Mortality Survey. The cause of each death was assigned using two methods: computerized expert algorithms arranged in a hierarchy and physician completion of a death certificate for each child. The findings of the two methods were compared to each other, and plausibility checks were conducted to assess which is the preferred method. Comparison of some direct measures from this study with CHERG modeled cause of death estimates are discussed.FindingsThe cause distributions of neonatal deaths as determined by expert algorithms and the physician were similar, with the same top three causes by both methods and all but two other causes within one rank of each other. Although child causes of death differed more, the reasons often could be discerned by analyzing algorithmic criteria alongside the physician’s application of required minimal diagnostic criteria. Including all algorithmic (primary and co–morbid) and physician (direct, underlying and contributing) diagnoses in the comparison minimized the differences, with kappa coefficients greater than 0.40 for five of 11 neonatal diagnoses and nine of 13 child diagnoses. By algorithmic diagnosis, early onset neonatal infection was significantly associated (χ2 = 13.2, P < 0.001) with maternal infection, and the geographic distribution of child meningitis deaths closely corresponded with that for meningitis surveillance cases and deaths.ConclusionsVerbal autopsy conducted in the context of a national mortality survey can provide useful estimates of the cause distributions of neonatal and child deaths. While the current study found reasonable agreement between the expert algorithm and physician analyses, it also demonstrated greater plausibility for two algorithmic diagnoses and validation work is needed to ascertain the findings. Direct, large–scale measurement of causes of death complement, can strengthen, and in some settings may be preferred over modeled estimates.

Highlights

  • Engaging local civil society in the adoption, implementation, and enforcement of tobacco control policies, such as smoke-free air policies, has been a widely-used strategy in the United States and other high-income countries; this strategy has not been used widely in low- and middle-income countries

  • Multi-sectoral local coalitions aligning civil society and local public health agencies have been effective in changing policy and have been relevant to advancing tobacco control policies [3,4,5,6]

  • This collaborative approach has been applied to tobacco broadly in high-income countries (HICs) but to a lesser degree in Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Engaging local civil society in the adoption, implementation, and enforcement of tobacco control policies, such as smoke-free air policies, has been a widely-used strategy in the United States and other high-income countries; this strategy has not been used widely in low- and middle-income countries. Multi-sectoral local coalitions aligning civil society and local public health agencies have been effective in changing policy and have been relevant to advancing tobacco control policies [3,4,5,6]. Community Coalition Action Theory (CCAT) synthesizes research on characteristics and processes of community coalitions (Figure 1) [7,8].

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call