Abstract

BackgroundWhile most child deaths are caused by highly preventable and treatable diseases such as pneumonia, diarrhea, and malaria, several sociodemographic, cultural and health system factors work against children surviving from these diseases.MethodsA retrospective verbal/social autopsy survey was conducted in 2012 to measure the biological causes and social determinants of under–five years old deaths from 2007 to 2010 in Doume, Nguelemendouka, and Abong–Mbang health districts in the Eastern Region of Cameroon. The present study sought to identify important sociodemographic and household characteristics of the 1–59 month old deaths, including the coverage of key preventive indicators of normal child care, and illness recognition and care–seeking for the children along the Pathway to Survival model.FindingsOf the 635 deceased children with a completed interview, just 26.8% and 11.2% lived in households with an improved source of drinking water and sanitation, respectively. Almost all of the households (96.1%) used firewood for cooking, and 79.2% (n = 187) of the 236 mothers who cooked inside their home usually had their children beside them when they cooked. When 614 of the children became fatally ill, the majority (83.7%) of caregivers sought or tried to seek formal health care, but with a median delay of 2 days from illness onset to the decision to seek formal care. As a result, many (n = 111) children were taken for care only after their illness progressed from mild or moderate to severe. The main barriers to accessing the formal health system were the expenses for transportation, health care and other related costs.ConclusionsThe most common social factors that contributed to the deaths of 1–59–month old children in the study setting included poor living conditions, prevailing customs that led to exposure to indoor smoke, and health–related behaviors such as delaying the decision to seek care. Increasing caregivers’ ability to recognize the danger signs of childhood illnesses and to facilitate timely and appropriate health care–seeking, and improving standards of living such that parents or caregivers can overcome the economic obstacles, are measures that could make a difference in the survival of the ill children in the study area.

Highlights

  • Correspondence to: Background While most child deaths are caused by highly preventable and treatable diseases such as pneumonia, diarrhea, and malaria, several sociodemographic, cultural and health system factors work against children surviving from these diseases

  • The most common social factors that contributed to the deaths of 1–59–month old children in the study setting included poor living conditions, prevailing customs that led to exposure to indoor smoke, and health–related behaviors such as delaying the decision to seek care

  • Increasing caregivers’ ability to recognize the danger signs of childhood illnesses and to facilitate timely and appropriate health care–seeking, and improving standards of living such that parents or caregivers can overcome the economic obstacles, are measures that could make a difference in the survival of the ill children in the study area

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of this study was to unveil some of the complex and modifiable factors that contribute to child mortality [9] in the study area, known as one of the most impoverished regions of Cameroon [10], that led to its being dubbed “the forgotten region”, for use by health managers to prioritize and design evidence–based child survival interventions. The fundamental aim of the study was to identify the household, community, and health system factors that contributed to the child deaths that occurred from 2007 to 2010 in Doume, Nguelemendouka, and Abong–Mbang districts of Cameroon

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