| Literature DB >> 19500327 |
K Lisa Cairns1, Bradley A Woodruff, Mark Myatt, Linda Bartlett, Howard Goldberg, Les Roberts.
Abstract
Since the rates and causes of mortality are critical indicators of the overall health of a population, it is important to evaluate mortality even where no complete vital statistics reporting exists. Such settings include humanitarian emergencies. Experience in cross-sectional survey methods to assess retrospectively crude, age-specific, and maternal mortality in stable settings has been gained over the past 40 years, and methods appropriate to humanitarian emergencies have been developed. In humanitarian emergencies, crude and age-specific mortality can be gauged using methods based on the enumeration of individuals resident in randomly selected households-frequently referred to as a household census. Under-five mortality can also be assessed through a modified prior birth history method in which a representative sample of reproductive-aged women are questioned about dates of child births and deaths. Maternal mortality can be appraised via the initial identification of maternal deaths in the study population and a subsequent investigation to determine the cause of each death.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19500327 DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7717.2008.01085.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disasters ISSN: 0361-3666