| Literature DB >> 21966425 |
Evropi Theodoratou1, Jian Shayne F Zhang, Ivana Kolcic, Andrew M Davis, Sunil Bhopal, Harish Nair, Kit Yee Chan, Li Liu, Hope Johnson, Igor Rudan, Harry Campbell.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pneumonia is the leading cause of child deaths globally. The aims of this study were to: a) estimate the number and global distribution of pneumonia deaths for children 1-59 months for 2008 for countries with low (<85%) or no coverage of death certification using single-cause regression models and b) compare these country estimates with recently published ones based on multi-cause regression models. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21966425 PMCID: PMC3178589 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0025095
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Methods for estimating pneumonia child mortality in all countries (U5MR: under five mortality rate, GNI PPP: gross national income per capita at purchasing power parity, VR: vital registration, HIV ANC: index score for HIV prevalence based on the antenatal care surveillance; China U5MR in 2008 was 20.5/1000lb, however it was included in the Verbal autopsy model given that this country's profile is closer to the one of the high mortality countries and its GNI PPP was <$7510 in 2008).
| Vital registration model (35 countries) | Verbal autopsy model(87 countries) | |
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| a. U5MR <26/1000lb or GNI PPP >$7510b. VR coverage <85% | U5MR ≥26/1000lb |
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| VR data from low mortality - high coverage countries | a. PubMed search using the following keywords: |
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| n/a | a. Estimated pneumonia proportionate mortality in children 0–4yrs in developing countries and reported overall U5MR at the study siteb. Were community-based and longitudinal OR national based data OR control arms of intervention trialsc. Had a duration of at least 12 months (prospective or retrospective studies) OR included subjects of exactly the same age range (birth cohorts)d. Used verbal autopsies to assign the cause of deathe. Estimated mortality from at least two unique causesf. Had reported more than 50 deaths and had no more than 1/3 of deaths attributed to undetermined causes |
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| Single cause regression model including the following covariates: U5MR, GNI PPP and WHO area | Single cause regression model including the following covariates:U5MR, HIV ANC, malaria prevalence, two variables for the lower and upper age bounds |
Parameter estimates for the vital registration and verbal autopsy models (lnU5MR: Natural logarithm of the under 5 mortality rate; GNI: Gross National Income; WHO: World Health Organisation).
| Models | Predictors | ParameterEstimate | R2 |
|
| lnU5MR | 0.17 | 0.52 |
| GNI | −0.00 | ||
| WHO region | −0.18 | ||
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| |||
| Model for Sub-Sahara African countries | lnU5MR | 0.24 | 0.41 |
| Malaria | −0.40 | ||
| HIV | −0.04 | ||
| Model for non Sub-Sahara African high mortality countries | lnU5MR | 0.32 | 0.32 |
| Malaria | 0.39 | ||
| HIV | −0.09 |
Post-neonatal pneumonia number of deaths and mortality rates for the WHO regions (PN: Pneumonia; 95% CI: 95% Confidence Interval; WHO: World Health Organisation).
| Regions | # of 1–59m PN deaths (95% CI) | # of 1–59m PN deaths over 1–59m total deaths (95% CI) |
|
| 1181037(773857, 1803686) | 23.27%(17.15%, 32.75%) |
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| ||
| Countries from Africa WHO region (n = 44 of 46) | 569940(358622, 896048) | 19.22%(12.09%, 30.22%) |
| Countries from America WHO region (n = 15 of 35) | 9149(5218, 15706) | 16.59%(9.46%, 28.47%) |
| Countries from East Mediterranean WHO region (n = 19 of 21) | 207061(141241, 306405) | 30.69%(20.93%, 45.41%) |
| Countries from Europe WHO region (n = 15 of 53) | 6983(4470, 10945) | 16.01%(10.25%, 25.09%) |
| Countries from South East Asia WHO region (n = 11 of 11) | 336329(234801, 484244) | 31.45%(21.96%, 45.29%) |
| Countries from West Pacific WHO region (n = 18 of 27) | 51575(29504, 90337) | 20.79%(11.89%, 36.42%) |
Countries with the highest absolute and relative post-neonatal pneumonia mortality ordered by rank.
| Rank | # of 1–59m PN deaths | % of 1–59m PN deaths over 1–59m total deaths |
| 1 | India | Cape Verde |
| 2 | Nigeria | Pakistan |
| 3 | Dem. Rep. of the Congo | Bhutan |
| 4 | Pakistan | Timor-Leste |
| 5 | Afghanistan | Lesotho |
| 6 | Ethiopia | Nauru |
| 7 | China | Myanmar |
| 8 | Kenya | Djibouti |
| 9 | Sudan | Sri Lanka |
| 10 | Angola | Bangladesh |
| 11 | Bangladesh | Somalia |
| 12 | Indonesia | Mauritania |
| 13 | Uganda | India |
| 14 | United Republic of Tanzania | Nepal |
| 15 | Myanmar | Sudan |
| 16 | Niger | Yemen |
| 17 | Somalia | Ethiopia |
| 18 | Burkina Faso | Comoros |
| 19 | Chad | Egypt |
| 20 | Mali | Sao Tome and Principe |
Figure 1National estimates of number of pneumonia deaths for children 1–59 months (data on 71 low mortality and high vital registration coverage are extracted from the WHO Mortality Database using the International Classification of Diseases 9 and 10 versions).
Figure 2National estimates of % pneumonia deaths for children 1–59 months (data on 71 low mortality and high vital registration coverage are extracted from the WHO Mortality Database using the International Classification of Diseases 9 and 10 versions).
Sensitivity analysis for the global post-neonatal pneumonia estimates based on the application of alternative verbal autopsy models (VAM) for the high mortality countries (Number of pneumonia deaths for low mortality countries and for India and China are estimated in the same way among all four different approaches; VAM1a & VAM1b are the models presented in the main analysis; PN: Pneumonia; lnU5MR: Natural logarithm of the under 5 mortality rate; HIV ANC: index score for HIV prevalence based on the antenatal care surveillance).
| Models | Model description | Global 1–59 m PN deaths(% of all 1–59 m deaths) |
| VAM1a & VAM1b | 2 VA models (one for the sub-Sahara high mortality countries and one for the remaining high mortality countries) adjusted for lnU5MR, an index score for malaria prevalence, the HIV ANC score and two age-related dummy variables (model presented in the main analysis) |
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| VAM2a & VAM2b | 2 VA models (one for the sub-Sahara high mortality countries and one for the remaining high mortality countries) adjusted for lnU5MR and two age-related dummy variables | 1.17 M (23.12%) |
| VAM3 | 1 global model (for all 85 high mortality countries) adjusted for lnU5MR, malaria prevalence, HIV ANC and the two age-related dummy variables (VAM3) | 1.04 M (20.55%) |
| VAM4 | 1 global model (for all 85 high mortality countries) adjusted only for lnU5MR and the two age-related dummy variables | 1.18 M (23.33%) |