Literature DB >> 34193238

Mortality beyond emergency threshold in a silent crisis- results from a population-based mortality survey in Ouaka prefecture, Central African Republic, 2020.

Eve Robinson1, Lawrence Lee1, Leslie F Roberts2, Aurelie Poelhekke3, Xavier Charles1,4, Adelaide Ouabo1, Jorieke Vyncke4, Cono Ariti5, Mariette Claudia Adame Gbanzi6, Martial Tanguy Ouakouma7, Nell Gray4, Maura Daly3, Kate White3, Sam Templeman3, Mia Hejdenberg8, Maaike Hersevoort1, Sibyl Jade Pena8, Anna Kuehne9,10.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Central African Republic (CAR) suffers a protracted conflict and has the second lowest human development index in the world. Available mortality estimates vary and differ in methodology. We undertook a retrospective mortality study in the Ouaka prefecture to obtain reliable mortality data.
METHODS: We conducted a population-based two-stage cluster survey from 9 March to 9 April, 2020 in Ouaka prefecture. We aimed to include 64 clusters of 12 households for a required sample size of 3636 persons. We assigned clusters to communes proportional to population size and then used systematic random sampling to identify cluster starting points from a dataset of buildings in each commune. In addition to the mortality survey questions, we included an open question on challenges faced by the household.
RESULTS: We completed 50 clusters with 591 participating households including 4000 household members on the interview day. The median household size was 7 (interquartile range (IQR): 4-9). The median age was 12 (IQR: 5-27). The birth rate was 59.0/1000 population (95% confidence interval (95%-CI): 51.7-67.4). The crude and under-five mortality rates (CMR & U5MR) were 1.33 (95%-CI: 1.09-1.61) and 1.87 (95%-CI: 1.37-2.54) deaths/10,000 persons/day, respectively. The most common specified causes of death were malaria/fever (16.0%; 95%-CI: 11.0-22.7), violence (13.2%; 95%-CI: 6.3-25.5), diarrhoea/vomiting (10.6%; 95%-CI: 6.2-17.5), and respiratory infections (8.4%; 95%-CI: 4.6-14.8). The maternal mortality ratio (MMR) was 2525/100,000 live births (95%-CI: 825-5794). Challenges reported by households included health problems and access to healthcare, high number of deaths, lack of potable water, insufficient means of subsistence, food insecurity and violence.
CONCLUSIONS: The CMR, U5MR and MMR exceed previous estimates, and the CMR exceeds the humanitarian emergency threshold. Violence is a major threat to life, and to physical and mental wellbeing. Other causes of death speak to poor living conditions and poor access to healthcare and preventive measures, corroborated by the challenges reported by households. Many areas of CAR face similar challenges to Ouaka. If these results were generalisable across CAR, the country would suffer one of the highest mortality rates in the world, a reminder that the longstanding "silent crisis" continues.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Armed conflicts; Central African Republic; Child mortality; Health services accessibility; Humanitarian emergency; Maternal mortality; Mortality; Mortality survey; Quality of health care; Violence

Year:  2021        PMID: 34193238     DOI: 10.1186/s13031-021-00385-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Confl Health        ISSN: 1752-1505            Impact factor:   2.723


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