4.6 Article

Routine mortality surveillance to identify the cause of death pattern for out-of-hospital adult (aged 12+years) deaths in Bangladesh: introduction of automated verbal autopsy

Journal

BMC PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-10468-7

Keywords

Automated verbal autopsy; Mortality statistics; Community deaths; Bangladesh; Causes of death

Funding

  1. Bloomberg Philanthropies
  2. Vital Strategies

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In Bangladesh, a poorly functioning national system of registering deaths and determining their causes leads to lack of important information. In 2017, an improved death registration system and automated verbal autopsy were introduced, proving that automated methods are feasible, produce plausible results, and provide critical information on community causes of death.
BackgroundIn Bangladesh, a poorly functioning national system of registering deaths and determining their causes leaves the country without important information on which to inform health programming, particularly for the 85% of deaths that occur in the community. In 2017, an improved death registration system and automated verbal autopsy (VA) were introduced to 13 upazilas to assess the utility of VA as a routine source of policy-relevant information and to identify leading causes of deaths (COD) in rural Bangladesh.MethodsData from 22,535 VAs, collected in 12 upazilas between October 2017 and August 2019, were assigned a COD using the SmartVA Analyze 2.0 computer algorithm. The plausibility of the VA results was assessed using a series of demographic and epidemiological checks in the Verbal Autopsy Interpretation, Performance and Evaluation Resource (VIPER) software tool.ResultsCompleteness of community death reporting was 65%. The vast majority (85%) of adult deaths were due to non-communicable diseases, with ischemic heart disease, stroke and chronic respiratory disease comprising about 60% alone. Leading COD were broadly consistent with Global Burden of Disease study estimates.ConclusionsRoutine VA collection using automated methods is feasible, can produce plausible results and provides critical information on community COD in Bangladesh. Routine VA and VIPER have potential application to countries with weak death registration systems.

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