| Literature DB >> 23364094 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a lack of reliable data in developing countries to inform policy and optimise resource allocation. Health and socio-demographic surveillance sites (HDSS) have the potential to address this gap. Mortality levels and trends have previously been documented in rural South Africa. However, complex space-time clustering of mortality, determinants, and their impact has not been fully examined.Entities:
Keywords: South Africa; demographic surveillance system; determinants; mortality; population attributable fractions; rural; space–time risk
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23364094 PMCID: PMC3556703 DOI: 10.3402/gha.v6i0.19239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Action ISSN: 1654-9880 Impact factor: 2.640
Fig. 1Maps showing the location of the Agincourt HDSS (41).
Demographic profile of study sample by age group, 1992–2008
| Characteristic | Infants (<1 years) | Children (1–4 years) | Children (5–14 years) | Adults (15–49 years) | Adults (50–64 years) | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Denominator (person-years) | 28,470 | 116,729 | 311,387 | 549,030 | 70,864 | 1,110,166 |
| Female (%) | 16,030 (50.4) | 20,838 (50.3) | 34,770 (50.8) | 99,994 (56.6) | 4,062 (59.5) | 576,680 (51.9) |
| South African (%) | 20,382 (64.1) | 25,848 (62.3) | 43,870 (65.2) | 66,926 (66.9) | 4,292 (62.9) | 117,448 (64.1) |
| Deaths (% of overall deaths) | 826 (9.1) | 669 (7.4) | 289 (3.2) | 3,798 (42.0) | 1,337 (14.8) | 9,035 (100) |
| Mean age at death (standard deviation) | 126.2 days (112.7) | 2.1 years (0.9) | 10.0 years (2.9) | 34.6 years (8.5) | 57.3 years (4.5) | 41.8 years (26.8) |
| Median age at death (interquartile range) | 99 days (16–217) | 1.9 years (1.4–2.6) | 10.0 years (7.5–12.5) | 34.8 years (28.4–41.5) | 57.0 years (53.5–61.4) | 40.7 years (24.2–63.8) |
| Mortality rate | 29.0 | 5.7 | 0.9 | 6.9 | 18.9 | 8.1 |
Per 1,000 person-years.
Includes 5–14 and 65+ age groups.
Top five causes-of-death by age group, 1992–2008
| Rank | Infants (<1) | No. (percent) | Children (1–4) | No. (percent) | Adults (15–49) | No. (percent) | Adults (50–64) | No. (percent) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | HIV/TB | 132 (16.6) | HIV/TB | 192 (29.5) | HIV/TB | 1,545 (43) | HIV/TB | 317 (24.7) |
| 2 | Diarrhoea or malnutrition | 104 (13.1) | Diarrhoea or malnutrition | 164 (25.2) | Assault | 164 (4.6) | Vascular | 159 (12.4) |
| 3 | ARI or pneumonia | 103 (13) | External | 39 (6) | Transport accident | 134 (3.7) | Neoplasms | 88 (6.9) |
| 4 | Perinatal condition | 93 (11.7) | ARI or pneumonia | 27 (4.2) | Vascular | 109 (3) | Digestive | 54 (4.2) |
| 5 | Congenital | 25 (3.1) | Congenital | 13 (2) | Neoplasms | 106 (2.9) | Suicide | 35 (2.7) |
Based on ICD-10 main cause-of-death only, that is, P00–P96 (not inclusive of date of birth and date of death timing).
Fig. 2Age-specific mortality rates by year, 1992–2008.
All-cause multivariable risk factor analyses for age-specific mortality using Bayesian modelling
| Infants (<1) | Children (1–4) | Young adults (15–49) | Older adults (50–64) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Factors | IRR (95% BCI) | OR (95% BCI) | HR (95% BCI) | HR (95% BCI) |
| Temporal | ||||
| Year (continuous) | 1.25 (1.07, 1.58) | 1.05 (1.04, 1.07) | – | – |
| By period | ||||
| 1992–1997 | – | – | 1 | 1 |
| 1998–2003 | – | – | 2.61 (2.42, 2.83) | 2.59 (2.16, 3.08) |
| 2004–2008 | – | – | 2.90 (2.52, 3.32) | 4.07 (2.85, 5.60) |
| Proximate individual- and household-level determinants | ||||
| Increasing age in years | n/a | 0.51 (0.46, 0.56) | 1.06 (1.06, 1.07) | 1.04 (1.02, 1.06) |
| Winter season | n/a | 1.33 (1.12, 1.57) | – | – |
| Male gender | 1.10 (0.83, 1.41) | 1.47 (1.38, 1.56) | 3.03 (2.64, 3.48) | |
| Mozambican (maternal for infants and children) | 1.12 (0.90, 1.38) | 0.94 (0.87, 1.02) | 0.59 (0.50, 0.70) | |
| Maternal death (in first year for infants or 1–4 for children) | ||||
| Not due to HIV/TB | 6.01 (3.18, 11.37) | 5.45 (2.99, 8.75) | n/a | n/a |
| Due to HIV/TB | 30.78 (12.13, 78.11) | 15.11 (8.39, 24.54) | n/a | n/a |
| Migrant: ≥6 months outside site per year (maternal status for infants and children) | 0.71 (0.48, 1.02) | 1.17 (1.09, 1.25) | 1.23 (1.04, 1.44) | |
| Paternal death (prior birth to within first year for infants or 1–4 for children) | ||||
| Not due to HIV/TB | 1.51 (0.75, 2.54) | n/a | n/a | |
| Due to HIV/TB | 2.19 (0.95, 4.06) | n/a | n/a | |
| Tertiary education (maternal for infants and children) | – | – | ||
| Secondary or higher for adult models | n/a | n/a | 0.98 (0.91,1.05) | 0.56 (0.40, 0.77) |
| Cumulative other household deaths | 7.24 (5.70, 9.28) | – | – | |
| Number of other household deaths | – | – | ||
| None | 1 | |||
| 1–4 | 1.17 (1.09, 1.25) | |||
| 5+ | 1.81 (1.39, 2.30) | |||
| Household head: | ||||
| Male | 0.78 (0.60, 1.02) | 0.53 (0.50, 0.57) | 0.40 (0.35, 0.45) | |
| Death | 4.52 (4.16, 4.91) | 6.74 (5.70, 7.92) | ||
| ≥40 years of age | 1.44 (1.08, 1.90) | 0.62 (0.58, 0.66) | 0.15 (0.13, 0.17) | |
| Mozambican | 1.71 (1.40, 2.09) | |||
| Infant and child specific factors | ||||
| Parity | n/a | n/a | ||
| Death of previous sibling | 1.56 (0.75, 2.90) | 1.63 (1.08, 2.45) | n/a | n/a |
| Never breastfed | 203.7 (113.9, 342.4) | n/a | n/a | |
| Increasing birth weight | n/a | n/a | ||
| Other child born less than one year prior | 8.07 (1.33, 28.02) | n/a | n/a | |
| Four or more children in the household | 1.44 (1.13, 1.80) | n/a | n/a | |
| Socio-economic determinants | ||||
| Household SES (MCA) quintile for infant and child models; tertiale for adult models | ||||
| Most poor | 1 | 1 | ||
| Poor | 0.76 (0.69, 0.84) | 0.78 (0.58, 1.05) | ||
| Least poor | 0.65 (0.58, 0.71) | 0.78 (0.58, 1.03) | ||
| Unknown | 1.48 (1.26, 1.71) | 1.01 (0.75, 1.35) | ||
| Village level determinants | ||||
| Proportion of village deaths due HIV/TB (≥17%) | – | – | 1.92 (1.40, 2.69) | |
| Average migrant months per year per village individual | – | – | 0.95 (0.87, 1.07) | |
| Environmental or geographic factors | ||||
| Distance to nearest health facility (>6 km) | 5.34 (3.11, 9.98) | 1.20 (0.17, 8.63) | ||
| Climatic proxy (elevation in metres) | 0.998 (0.997, 0.998) | 0.998 (0.997, 0.999) | ||
| Additional model parameters | ||||
| Individual unstructured variation (σu 2) | – | 0.04 (0.01, 0.11) | 0.11 (0.08, 0.14) | 0.16 (0.10, 0.27) |
| Spatially structured variation (σϕ 2) | 0.08 (0.03, 0.23) | 0.23 (0.10, 0.48) | 2.21 (1.09, 4.11) | 0.25 (0.11, 0.56) |
| Autoregressive structured temporal variation (σα 2) | 0.60 (0.27, 1.57) | 0.29 (0.12, 0.68) | – | – |
| Dispersion parameter (r) for negative binomial model | 0.03 (0.025, 0.035) | – | – | – |
| Shape parameter (Weibull) | – | – | 1.93 (1.86, 1.99) | 1.92 (1.83, 2.01) |
| Deviance Information Criterion (DIC) | 8,103 | 8,612 | 49,576 | 10,193 |
Results for child model published previously in (45).
Measure of association based on analytical data structure and model type for given age-group; incidence rate ratio (IRR), odds ratio (OR); hazard ratio (HR); BCI stands for Bayesian credibility interval (similar in interpretation to a conventional 95% confidence interval).
Significant in bivariate analysis, estimate following multivariable adjustment.
Significant (at 10% level) in bivariate analysis but substantial missing data so not included in final multivariable model.
Not significant at 10% level in bivariate analysis.
Small numbers (hence wide BCI's).
Significant at bivariate level but not run in Bayesian multivariable framework due to co-linearity with another predictor.
Median split.
Fig. 3Geographic risk of adult mortality adjusting for distance to nearest health facility at prediction point using a univariate Bayesian spatial kriging model that includes distance to health facility as the risk factor (white and black scale represents lowest and highest risk, respectively).
Fig. 4Maps of all-cause mortality risk by age group within the Agincourt sub-district based on baseline Poisson model without covariates.