| Literature DB >> 29202052 |
Lucia D'Ambruoso1,2,3, Kathleen Kahn2,3,4, Ryan G Wagner2,3, Rhian Twine3, Barry Spies5, Maria van der Merwe5, F Xavier Gómez-Olivé3,4, Stephen Tollman2,3,4, Peter Byass1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Verbal autopsy (VA) is a health surveillance technique used in low and middle-income countries to establish medical causes of death (CODs) for people who die outside hospitals and/or without registration. By virtue of the deaths it investigates, VA is also an opportunity to examine social exclusion from access to health systems. The aims were to develop a system to collect and interpret information on social and health systems determinants of deaths investigated in VA.Entities:
Keywords: Civil registration and vital statistics; Health surveillance; Health systems; Social determinants; South Africa; Verbal autopsy
Year: 2016 PMID: 29202052 PMCID: PMC5675065 DOI: 10.1186/s41256-016-0002-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Res Policy ISSN: 2397-0642
Fig. 1Conceptual framework of the determinants of health outcomes
Questions on social and health systems factors at and around the time of death
| Theme | Question | |
|---|---|---|
| ↓ | Recognition of severity | In the final days before death, were there any doubts about whether medical care was needed? |
| In the final days before death, was traditional medicine used? | ||
| Mobilising assets to seek care | In the final days before death, did anyone use a telephone or cell phone to call for help? | |
| Did (s)he use motorised transport to get to the hospital or health facility? | ||
| Access to care | Over the course of illness, did the total costs of care and treatment prohibit other household payments? | |
| In the final days before death, did s/he travel to a hospital or health facility? | ||
| Does it take more than 2 h to get to the nearest hospital or health facility from the deceased's household? | ||
| Quality of care | Were there any problems during admission to the hospital or health facility? | |
| Were there any problems with the way (s)he was treated (medical treatment, procedures, interpersonal attitudes, respect, dignity) in the hospital or health facility? | ||
| Were there any problems getting medications, or diagnostic tests in the hospital or health facility? |
Fig. 2Map of South African Medical Research Council and the University of Witwatersrand’s Agincourt Health and Socio-Demographic Surveillance Site (HDSS) Bushbuckridge, Mpumalanga
Cause category specific mortality fraction: all deaths, age and sex sub-groups
| Category of COD | Neonate (<28 d) | Infant (1–11 m) | Under 5 (1–4 y) | Child (5–14 y) | Adult (15–49 y) | Mid-age (50–64 y) | Elder (65-84+ y) | Female | Male | Total number of deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious | 27 (4.8) | 40 (7.1) | 11 (2.0) | 315 (56.0) | 74 (13.2) | 95 (16.9) | 286 (50.9) | 276 (49.1) | 562 (47.0) | |
| Non-communicable | 2 (0.4) | 5 (1.1) | 1 (0.2) | 129 (27.6) | 82 (17.5) | 249 (53.2) | 269 (57.5) | 199 (42.5) | 468 (39.1) | |
| External | 2 (2.3) | 6 (7.0) | 3 (3.5) | 60 (69.8) | 11 (12.8) | 4 (4.7) | 16 (18.6) | 70 (81.4) | 86 (7.2) | |
| Indeterminate | 7 (13.0) | 2 (3.7) | 2 (3.7) | 26 (48.1) | 5 (9.3) | 12 (22.2) | 34 (63.0) | 20 (37.0) | 54 (4.5) | |
| Neonatal | 16 (84.2) | 2 (10.5) | 1 (5.3) | 9 (47.4) | 10 (52.6) | 19 (1.6) | ||||
| Maternal | 7 (100.0) | 7 (100.0) | 7 (0.6) | |||||||
| Female | 14 (60.9) | 22 (66.7) | 23 (42.6) | 5 (29.4) | 291 (54.2) | 63 (36.6) | 203 (56.4) | 621 (51.9) | ||
| Male | 9 (39.1) | 11 (33.3) | 31 (57.4) | 12 (70.6) | 246 (45.8) | 109 (63.4) | 157 (43.6) | 575 (48.1) | ||
| Total number of deaths | 23 (1.9) | 33 (2.8) | 54 (4.5) | 17 (1.4) | 537 (44.9) | 172 (14.4) | 360 (30.1) | 621 (51.9) | 575 (48.1) | 1196 (100) |
Absolute and relative frequencies of social and health systems indicators as proportions of numbers of deaths, by COD categories
| Recognition | Access | Quality of care | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Category of COD | Doubts about the need for care | Use of traditional medicine | Overall costs prohibitive | Did not use cellphone | Did not travel to hospital/ health facility | >2 h to hospital/ health facility | Did not use motor transporta | Problems with admissiona | Problems with treatmenta | Problems with medicationsa | Total number of deaths |
| Infectious | 28 (5.0) | 102 (18.1) | 254 (45.2) | 178 (31.7) | 123 (21.9) | 6 (1.1) | 9 (2.1) | 8 (1.8) | 17 (3.9) | 19 (4.3) | 562 (47.0) |
| Non-communicable | 22 (4.7) | 53 (11.3) | 165 (35.3) | 168 (35.9) | 154 (32.9) | 1 (0.2) | 6 (1.9) | 8 (2.5) | 10 (3.2) | 8 (2.5) | 468 (39.1) |
| External | 1 (1.2) | 4 (4.7) | 71 (82.6) | 71 (82.6) | 1 (6.7) | 86 (7.2) | |||||
| Indeterminate | 3 (5.6) | 4 (7.4) | 6 (11.1) | 31 (57.4) | 34 (63.0) | 2 (10.0) | 1 (5.0) | 54 (4.5) | |||
| Neonatal | 1 (5.3) | 3 (15.8) | 11 (57.9) | 7 (36.8) | 19 (1.6) | ||||||
| Maternal | 3 (42.9) | 2 (28.6) | 1 (20.0) | 7 (0.6) | |||||||
| 1196 (100.0) | |||||||||||
| Total number of indicators reported n (%) | 53 (4.4) | 161 (13.5) | 432 (36.1) | 462 (38.6) | 391 (32.7) | 7 (0.6) | 16 (2.0) | 18 (2.2) | 29 (3.6) | 27 (3.4) | |
aDenominator for the relative frequency was the number of deaths that had travelled to a hospital or health facility
N.B. Respondents were able to indicate more than one social and health system indicator for each death reported. Proportional frequencies of the new indicators therefore sum to >100 %
Fig. 3Frequencies of responses to new social and health systems indicators, all deaths (n = 1,196)
Fig. 4Frequencies of responses to new social and health systems indicators, infectious and non-communicable deaths (n = 562 and 468)
Fig. 5Frequencies of responses to new social and health systems indicators, external and indeterminate deaths (n = 86 and 54)
Fig. 6Frequencies of responses to new social and health systems indicators, neonatal and maternal deaths (n = 19 and 7)
Absolute and relative frequencies of social and health systems indicators as proportions of numbers of deaths, by age groups
| Recognition | Access | Quality of care | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age group | Doubts about the need for care | Use of traditional medicine | Overall costs prohibitive | Did not use cellphone | Did not travel to hospital/ health facility | >2 h to hospital/ health facility | Did not use motor transporta | Problems with admissiona | Problems with treatmenta | Problems with medicationsa | Total number of deaths |
| Neonate (<28 days) | 2 (8.7) | 3 (13.0) | 3 (13.0) | 13 (56.5) | 13 (56.5) | 23 (1.9) | |||||
| Infant (1–11 months) | 8 (24.2) | 7 (21.2) | 12 (36.4) | 9 (27.3) | 5 (20.8) | 33 (2.8) | |||||
| Under 5 (1–4 years) | 3 (5.6) | 8 (14.8) | 10 (18.5) | 25 (46.3) | 20 (37.0) | 5 (8.8) | 54 (4.5) | ||||
| Child (5–14 years) | 4 (23.5) | 7 (41.2) | 7 (41.2) | 17 (1.4) | |||||||
| Adult (15–49 years) | 26 (4.8) | 83 (15.5) | 225 (41.9) | 188 (35.0) | 142 (26.4) | 7 (1.3) | 4 (1.0) | 9 (2.3) | 17 (4.3) | 16 (4.1) | 537 (44.9) |
| Mid-age (50–64 years) | 7 (4.1) | 18 (10.5) | 61 (35.5) | 69 (40.1) | 49 (28.5) | 2 (1.6) | 4 (3.3) | 5 (4.1) | 10 (8.1) | 172 (14.4) | |
| Elder (65-84+ years) | 15 (4.2) | 41 (11.4) | 122 (33.9) | 148 (41.1) | 151 (41.9) | 2 (1.0) | 5 (2.4) | 7 (3.3) | 1 (0.5) | 360 (30.1) | |
| 1196 (100.0) | |||||||||||
| Total number of indicators reported | 53 (4.4) | 161 (13.5) | 432 (36.1) | 462 (38.6) | 391 (32.7) | 7 (0.6) | 16 (2.0) | 18 (2.2) | 29 (3.6) | 27 (3.4) | |
aDenominator for the relative frequency was the number of deaths that had travelled to a hospital or health facility
N.B. Respondents were able to indicate more than one social and health system indicator for each death reported. Proportional frequencies of the new indicators therefore sum to >100 %
Fig. 7Frequencies of responses to new social and health systems indicators, <=14 years and > =15 years deaths (n = 127 and 1069)