Trend and causes of adult mortality in Kersa health and demographic surveillance system (Kersa HDSS), eastern Ethiopia: verbal autopsy method |
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Authors: | Wondimye Ashenafi Frehywot Eshetu Nega Assefa Lemessa Oljira Melkamu Dedefo Desalew Zelalem Negga Baraki Melake Demena |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Public Health,Haramaya University,Harar,Ethiopia;2.Department of Nursing,Haramaya University,Harar,Ethiopia;3.Department of Environmental Health,Haramaya University,Harar,Ethiopia;4.Department of Statistics,Haramaya University,Harar,Ethiopia;5.Kersa Health and Demographic Surveillance System (Kersa- HDSS),Haramaya University,Harar,Ethiopia;6.Center for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC-Ethiopia,Addis Ababa,Ethiopia;7.School of Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science,University of KwaZulu-Natal,Durban,South Africa |
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Abstract: | BackgroundThe health problems of adults have been neglected in many developing countries, yet many studies in these countries show high rates of premature mortality in adults. Measuring adult mortality and its cause through verbal autopsy (VA) methods is becoming an important process for mortality estimates and is a good indicator of the overall mortality rates in resource-limited settings. The objective of this analysis is to describe the levels, distribution, and trends of adult mortality over time (2008-2013) and causes of adult deaths using VA in Kersa Health and Demographic Surveillance System (Kersa HDSS).MethodsKersa HDSS is a demographic and health surveillance and research center established in 2007 in the eastern part of Ethiopia. This is a community-based longitudinal study where VA methods were used to assign probable cause of death. Two or three physicians independently assigned cause of death based on the completed VA forms in accordance with the World Health Organization’s International Classification of Diseases. In this analysis, the VA data considered were of all deaths of adults age 15 years and above, over a period of six years (2008–2013). The mortality fractions were determined and the causes of death analyzed. Analysis was done using STATA and graphs were designed using Microsoft Excel.ResultsA total of 1535 adult deaths occurred in the surveillance site during the study period and VA was completed for all these deaths. In general, the adult mortality rate over the six-year period was 8.5 per 1000 adult population, higher for males (9.6) and rural residents (8.6) than females (7.5) and urban residents (8.2). There is a general decrease in the mortality rates over the study period from 9.4 in 2008–2009 to 8.1 in 2012–2013. Out of the total deaths, about one-third (32.4%) occurred due to infectious and parasitic causes, and the second leading cause of death was diseases of circulatory system (11.4%), followed by gastrointestinal disorders (9.2%). Tuberculosis (TB) showed an increasing trend over the years and has been the leading cause of death in 2012 and 2013 for all adult age categories (15–49, 50–64, and 65 years and over). Chronic liver disease (CLD) was indicated as leading cause of death among adults in the age group 15–49 years.ConclusionThe increasing TB-related mortality in the study years as well as the relative high mortality due to CLD among adults of age 15–49 years should be further investigated and triangulated with health service data to understand the root cause of death. |
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