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Economic Feasibility of a New Method to Estimate Mortality in Crisis-Affected and Resource-Poor Settings

INTRODUCTION: Mortality data provide essential evidence on the health status of populations in crisis-affected and resource-poor settings and to guide and assess relief operations. Retrospective surveys are commonly used to collect mortality data in such populations, but require substantial resource...

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Autores principales: Roberts, Bayard, Morgan, Oliver W., Sultani, Mohammed Ghaus, Nyasulu, Peter, Rwebangila, Sunday, Sondorp, Egbert, Chandramohan, Daniel, Checchi, Francesco
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3176324/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21949879
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025175
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author Roberts, Bayard
Morgan, Oliver W.
Sultani, Mohammed Ghaus
Nyasulu, Peter
Rwebangila, Sunday
Sondorp, Egbert
Chandramohan, Daniel
Checchi, Francesco
author_facet Roberts, Bayard
Morgan, Oliver W.
Sultani, Mohammed Ghaus
Nyasulu, Peter
Rwebangila, Sunday
Sondorp, Egbert
Chandramohan, Daniel
Checchi, Francesco
author_sort Roberts, Bayard
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Mortality data provide essential evidence on the health status of populations in crisis-affected and resource-poor settings and to guide and assess relief operations. Retrospective surveys are commonly used to collect mortality data in such populations, but require substantial resources and have important methodological limitations. We evaluated the feasibility of an alternative method for rapidly quantifying mortality (the informant method). The study objective was to assess the economic feasibility of the informant method. METHODS: The informant method captures deaths through an exhaustive search for all deaths occurring in a population over a defined and recent recall period, using key community informants and next-of-kin of decedents. Between July and October 2008, we implemented and evaluated the informant method in: Kabul, Afghanistan; Mae La camp for Karen refugees, Thai-Burma border; Chiradzulu District, Malawi; and Lugufu and Mtabila refugee camps, Tanzania. We documented the time and cost inputs for the informant method in each site, and compared these with projections for hypothetical retrospective mortality surveys implemented in the same site with a 6 month recall period and with a 30 day recall period. FINDINGS: The informant method was estimated to require an average of 29% less time inputs and 33% less monetary inputs across all four study sites when compared with retrospective surveys with a 6 month recall period, and 88% less time inputs and 86% less monetary inputs when compared with retrospective surveys with a 1 month recall period. Verbal autopsy questionnaires were feasible and efficient, constituting only 4% of total person-time for the informant method's implementation in Chiradzulu District. CONCLUSIONS: The informant method requires fewer resources and incurs less respondent burden. The method's generally impressive feasibility and the near real-time mortality data it provides warrant further work to develop the method given the importance of mortality measurement in such settings.
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spelling pubmed-31763242011-09-26 Economic Feasibility of a New Method to Estimate Mortality in Crisis-Affected and Resource-Poor Settings Roberts, Bayard Morgan, Oliver W. Sultani, Mohammed Ghaus Nyasulu, Peter Rwebangila, Sunday Sondorp, Egbert Chandramohan, Daniel Checchi, Francesco PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Mortality data provide essential evidence on the health status of populations in crisis-affected and resource-poor settings and to guide and assess relief operations. Retrospective surveys are commonly used to collect mortality data in such populations, but require substantial resources and have important methodological limitations. We evaluated the feasibility of an alternative method for rapidly quantifying mortality (the informant method). The study objective was to assess the economic feasibility of the informant method. METHODS: The informant method captures deaths through an exhaustive search for all deaths occurring in a population over a defined and recent recall period, using key community informants and next-of-kin of decedents. Between July and October 2008, we implemented and evaluated the informant method in: Kabul, Afghanistan; Mae La camp for Karen refugees, Thai-Burma border; Chiradzulu District, Malawi; and Lugufu and Mtabila refugee camps, Tanzania. We documented the time and cost inputs for the informant method in each site, and compared these with projections for hypothetical retrospective mortality surveys implemented in the same site with a 6 month recall period and with a 30 day recall period. FINDINGS: The informant method was estimated to require an average of 29% less time inputs and 33% less monetary inputs across all four study sites when compared with retrospective surveys with a 6 month recall period, and 88% less time inputs and 86% less monetary inputs when compared with retrospective surveys with a 1 month recall period. Verbal autopsy questionnaires were feasible and efficient, constituting only 4% of total person-time for the informant method's implementation in Chiradzulu District. CONCLUSIONS: The informant method requires fewer resources and incurs less respondent burden. The method's generally impressive feasibility and the near real-time mortality data it provides warrant further work to develop the method given the importance of mortality measurement in such settings. Public Library of Science 2011-09-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3176324/ /pubmed/21949879 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025175 Text en Roberts et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Roberts, Bayard
Morgan, Oliver W.
Sultani, Mohammed Ghaus
Nyasulu, Peter
Rwebangila, Sunday
Sondorp, Egbert
Chandramohan, Daniel
Checchi, Francesco
Economic Feasibility of a New Method to Estimate Mortality in Crisis-Affected and Resource-Poor Settings
title Economic Feasibility of a New Method to Estimate Mortality in Crisis-Affected and Resource-Poor Settings
title_full Economic Feasibility of a New Method to Estimate Mortality in Crisis-Affected and Resource-Poor Settings
title_fullStr Economic Feasibility of a New Method to Estimate Mortality in Crisis-Affected and Resource-Poor Settings
title_full_unstemmed Economic Feasibility of a New Method to Estimate Mortality in Crisis-Affected and Resource-Poor Settings
title_short Economic Feasibility of a New Method to Estimate Mortality in Crisis-Affected and Resource-Poor Settings
title_sort economic feasibility of a new method to estimate mortality in crisis-affected and resource-poor settings
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3176324/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21949879
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025175
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