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Collecting verbal autopsies: improving and streamlining data collection processes using electronic tablets
Authors:Abraham D. Flaxman  Andrea Stewart  Jonathan C. Joseph  Nurul Alam  Sayed Saidul Alam  Hafizur Chowdhury  Meghan D. Mooney  Rasika Rampatige  Hazel Remolador  Diozele Sanvictores  Peter T. Serina  Peter Kim Streatfield  Veronica Tallo  Christopher J. L. Murray  Bernardo Hernandez  Alan D. Lopez  Ian Douglas Riley
Affiliation:1.Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation,University of Washington,Seattle,USA;2.International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research,Dhaka,Bangladesh;3.School of Population and Global Health,University of Melbourne,Parkville,Australia;4.Research Institute for Tropical Medicine,Muntinlupa City,Philippines
Abstract:

Background

There is increasing interest in using verbal autopsy to produce nationally representative population-level estimates of causes of death. However, the burden of processing a large quantity of surveys collected with paper and pencil has been a barrier to scaling up verbal autopsy surveillance. Direct electronic data capture has been used in other large-scale surveys and can be used in verbal autopsy as well, to reduce time and cost of going from collected data to actionable information.

Methods

We collected verbal autopsy interviews using paper and pencil and using electronic tablets at two sites, and measured the cost and time required to process the surveys for analysis. From these cost and time data, we extrapolated costs associated with conducting large-scale surveillance with verbal autopsy.

Results

We found that the median time between data collection and data entry for surveys collected on paper and pencil was approximately 3 months. For surveys collected on electronic tablets, this was less than 2 days. For small-scale surveys, we found that the upfront costs of purchasing electronic tablets was the primary cost and resulted in a higher total cost. For large-scale surveys, the costs associated with data entry exceeded the cost of the tablets, so electronic data capture provides both a quicker and cheaper method of data collection.

Conclusions

As countries increase verbal autopsy surveillance, it is important to consider the best way to design sustainable systems for data collection. Electronic data capture has the potential to greatly reduce the time and costs associated with data collection. For long-term, large-scale surveillance required by national vital statistical systems, electronic data capture reduces costs and allows data to be available sooner.
Keywords:
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