Literature DB >> 33752622

Improving cause of death certification in the Philippines: implementation of an electronic verbal autopsy decision support tool (SmartVA auto-analyse) to aid physician diagnoses of out-of-facility deaths.

Rohina Joshi1,2,3, R H Hazard4, Pasyodun Koralage Buddhika Mahesh4, L Mikkelsen4, F Avelino5, Carmina Sarmiento4, A Segarra5, T Timbang5, F Sinson5, Patrick Diango5, I Riley4, H Chowdhury4, Irma L Asuncion5, G Khanom4, Alan D Lopez4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The majority of deaths in the Philippines occur out-of-facility and require a medical certificate of cause of death by Municipal Health Officers (MHOs) for burial. MHOs lack a standardised certification process for out-of-facility deaths and when no medical records are available, certify a high proportion of ill-defined causes of death. We aimed to develop and introduce SmartVA Auto-Analyse, a verbal autopsy (VA) based electronic decision support tool in order to assist the MHOs in certifying out-of-facility deaths.
METHOD: We conducted a stakeholder consultation, process mapping and a pre-test to assess feasibility and acceptability of SmartVA Auto-Analyse. MHOs were first asked to conduct an open-ended interview from the family members of the deceased, and if they were not able to arrive at a diagnosis, continue the interview using the standardised SmartVA questionnaire. Auto-Analyse then presented the MHO with the three most likely causes of death. For the pilot, the intervention was scaled-up to 91 municipalities. We performed a mixed-methods evaluation using the cause of death data and group discussions with the MHOs.
RESULTS: Of the 5649 deaths registered, Auto-Analyse was used to certify 4586 (81%). For the remaining 19%, doctors believed they could assign a cause of death based on the availability of medical records and the VA open narrative. When used, physicians used the Auto-Analyse diagnosis in 85% of cases to certify the cause of death. Only 13% of the deaths under the intervention had an undetermined cause of death. Group discussions identified two themes: Auto-Analyse standardized the certification of home deaths and assisted the MHOs to improve the quality of death certification.
CONCLUSION: Standardized VA combined with physician diagnosis using the SmartVA Auto-Analyse support tool was readily used by MHOs in the Philippines and can improve the quality of death certification of home deaths.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cause of death; Medical certification of cause of death; SmartVA; SmartVA for physicians; Verbal autopsy

Year:  2021        PMID: 33752622      PMCID: PMC7986549          DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-10542-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Public Health        ISSN: 1471-2458            Impact factor:   3.295


  16 in total

1.  Contribution of individual diseases to death in older adults with multiple diseases.

Authors:  Mary E Tinetti; Gail J McAvay; Terrence E Murphy; Cary P Gross; Haiqun Lin; Heather G Allore
Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc       Date:  2012-06-26       Impact factor: 5.562

2.  Use of Smartphone for Verbal Autopsy.

Authors:  Yi Zhao; Rohina Joshi; Rasika Rampatige; Jixin Sun; Liping Huang; Shu Chen; Ruijun Wu; Bruce Neal; Alan D Lopez; Andrea L Stewart; Peter T Serina; Cong Li; Jing Zhang; Jianxin Zhang; Yuhong Zhang; Lijing L Yan
Journal:  Asia Pac J Public Health       Date:  2016-09-24       Impact factor: 1.399

3.  Effects on the estimated cause-specific mortality fraction of providing physician reviewers with different formats of verbal autopsy data.

Authors:  Rohina Joshi; Devarsetty Praveen; Clara Chow; Bruce Neal
Journal:  Popul Health Metr       Date:  2011-08-04

4.  Prospective study of one million deaths in India: rationale, design, and validation results.

Authors:  Prabhat Jha; Vendhan Gajalakshmi; Prakash C Gupta; Rajesh Kumar; Prem Mony; Neeraj Dhingra; Richard Peto
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2005-12-20       Impact factor: 11.069

5.  Integrating community-based verbal autopsy into civil registration and vital statistics (CRVS): system-level considerations.

Authors:  Don de Savigny; Ian Riley; Daniel Chandramohan; Frank Odhiambo; Erin Nichols; Sam Notzon; Carla AbouZahr; Raj Mitra; Daniel Cobos Muñoz; Sonja Firth; Nicolas Maire; Osman Sankoh; Gay Bronson; Philip Setel; Peter Byass; Robert Jakob; Ties Boerma; Alan D Lopez
Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2017       Impact factor: 2.640

6.  A shortened verbal autopsy instrument for use in routine mortality surveillance systems.

Authors:  Peter Serina; Ian Riley; Andrea Stewart; Abraham D Flaxman; Rafael Lozano; Meghan D Mooney; Richard Luning; Bernardo Hernandez; Robert Black; Ramesh Ahuja; Nurul Alam; Sayed Saidul Alam; Said Mohammed Ali; Charles Atkinson; Abdulla H Baqui; Hafizur R Chowdhury; Lalit Dandona; Rakhi Dandona; Emily Dantzer; Gary L Darmstadt; Vinita Das; Usha Dhingra; Arup Dutta; Wafaie Fawzi; Michael Freeman; Saman Gamage; Sara Gomez; Dilip Hensman; Spencer L James; Rohina Joshi; Henry D Kalter; Aarti Kumar; Vishwajeet Kumar; Marilla Lucero; Saurabh Mehta; Bruce Neal; Summer Lockett Ohno; David Phillips; Kelsey Pierce; Rajendra Prasad; Devarsetty Praveen; Zul Premji; Dolores Ramirez-Villalobos; Rasika Rampatige; Hazel Remolador; Minerva Romero; Mwanaidi Said; Diozele Sanvictores; Sunil Sazawal; Peter K Streatfield; Veronica Tallo; Alireza Vadhatpour; Nandalal Wijesekara; Christopher J L Murray; Alan D Lopez
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2015-12-16       Impact factor: 8.775

7.  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
Journal:  Popul Health Metr       Date:  2018-02-01

8.  Assessing the quality of medical death certification: a case study of concordance between national statistics and results from a medical record review in a regional hospital in the Philippines.

Authors:  Marilla Lucero; Ian Douglas Riley; Riley H Hazard; Diozele Sanvictores; Veronica Tallo; Dorothy Gay Marmita Dumaluan; Juanita M Ugpo; Alan D Lopez
Journal:  Popul Health Metr       Date:  2018-12-29

9.  Automated verbal autopsy: from research to routine use in civil registration and vital statistics systems.

Authors:  Riley H Hazard; Mahesh P K Buddhika; John D Hart; Hafizur R Chowdhury; Sonja Firth; Rohina Joshi; Ferchito Avelino; Agnes Segarra; Deborah Carmina Sarmiento; Abdul Kalam Azad; Shah Ali Akbar Ashrafi; Khin Sandar Bo; Violoa Kwa; Alan D Lopez
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2020-03-09       Impact factor: 8.775

10.  Implementing and scaling verbal autopsies: into the unknown.

Authors:  Ross M Boyce; Raquel Reyes
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2020-03-09       Impact factor: 8.775

View more
  3 in total

1.  A Semantic-Based Framework for Verbal Autopsy to Identify the Cause of Maternal Death.

Authors:  Muhammad I A Durrani; Tabbasum Naz; Muhammad Atif; Numra Khalid; Alessia Amelio
Journal:  Appl Clin Inform       Date:  2021-09-22       Impact factor: 2.762

2.  Assessing the Diagnostic Accuracy of Physicians for Home Death Certification in Shanghai: Application of SmartVA.

Authors:  Lei Chen; Tian Xia; Rasika Rampatige; Hang Li; Tim Adair; Rohina Joshi; Zhen Gu; Huiting Yu; Bo Fang; Deirdre McLaughlin; Alan D Lopez; Chunfang Wang; Zheng'an Yuan
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2022-06-17

3.  Integrating community-based verbal autopsy into civil registration and vital statistics: lessons learnt from five countries.

Authors:  Sonja Margot Firth; John D Hart; Matthew Reeve; Hang Li; Lene Mikkelsen; Deborah Carmina Sarmiento; Khin Sandar Bo; Viola Kwa; Jin-Lei Qi; Peng Yin; Agnes Segarra; Ian Riley; Rohina Joshi
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2021-11
  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.