Monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in Malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.

BACKGROUND: The rate of decline in child mortality is too slow in most African countries to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of reducing under-five mortality by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015. Effective strategies to monitor child mortality are needed where accurate vital registration data...

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Main Authors: Agbessi Amouzou, Benjamin Banda, Willie Kachaka, Olga Joos, Mercy Kanyuka, Kenneth Hill, Jennifer Bryce
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3928330?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-91213c86748d4ee58e4a926618ff40fd2020-11-24T21:50:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0192e8893910.1371/journal.pone.0088939Monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in Malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.Agbessi AmouzouBenjamin BandaWillie KachakaOlga JoosMercy KanyukaKenneth HillJennifer BryceBACKGROUND: The rate of decline in child mortality is too slow in most African countries to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of reducing under-five mortality by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015. Effective strategies to monitor child mortality are needed where accurate vital registration data are lacking to help governments assess and report on progress in child survival. We present results from a test of a mortality monitoring approach based on recording of births and deaths by specially trained community health workers (CHWs) in Malawi. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Government-employed community health workers in Malawi are responsible for maintaining a Village Health Register, in which they record births and deaths that occur in their catchment area. We expanded on this system to provide additional training, supervision and incentives. We tested the equivalence between child mortality rates obtained from data on births and deaths collected by 160 randomly-selected and trained CHWs over twenty months in two districts to those computed through a standard household mortality survey. CHW reports produced an under-five mortality rate that was 84% (95%CI: [0.71,1.00]) of the household survey mortality rate and statistically equivalent to it. However, CHW data consistently underestimated under-five mortality, with levels of under-estimation increasing over time. Under-five deaths were more likely to be missed than births. Neonatal and infant deaths were more likely to be missed than older deaths. CONCLUSION: This first test of the accuracy and completeness of vital events data reported by CHWs in Malawi as a strategy for monitoring child mortality shows promising results but underestimated child mortality and was not stable over the four periods assessed. Given the Malawi government's commitment to strengthen its vital registration system, we are working with the Ministry of Health to implement a revised version of the approach that provides increased support to CHWs.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3928330?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Agbessi Amouzou
Benjamin Banda
Willie Kachaka
Olga Joos
Mercy Kanyuka
Kenneth Hill
Jennifer Bryce
spellingShingle Agbessi Amouzou
Benjamin Banda
Willie Kachaka
Olga Joos
Mercy Kanyuka
Kenneth Hill
Jennifer Bryce
Monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in Malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Agbessi Amouzou
Benjamin Banda
Willie Kachaka
Olga Joos
Mercy Kanyuka
Kenneth Hill
Jennifer Bryce
author_sort Agbessi Amouzou
title Monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in Malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.
title_short Monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in Malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.
title_full Monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in Malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.
title_fullStr Monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in Malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in Malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.
title_sort monitoring child mortality through community health worker reporting of births and deaths in malawi: validation against a household mortality survey.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description BACKGROUND: The rate of decline in child mortality is too slow in most African countries to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of reducing under-five mortality by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015. Effective strategies to monitor child mortality are needed where accurate vital registration data are lacking to help governments assess and report on progress in child survival. We present results from a test of a mortality monitoring approach based on recording of births and deaths by specially trained community health workers (CHWs) in Malawi. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Government-employed community health workers in Malawi are responsible for maintaining a Village Health Register, in which they record births and deaths that occur in their catchment area. We expanded on this system to provide additional training, supervision and incentives. We tested the equivalence between child mortality rates obtained from data on births and deaths collected by 160 randomly-selected and trained CHWs over twenty months in two districts to those computed through a standard household mortality survey. CHW reports produced an under-five mortality rate that was 84% (95%CI: [0.71,1.00]) of the household survey mortality rate and statistically equivalent to it. However, CHW data consistently underestimated under-five mortality, with levels of under-estimation increasing over time. Under-five deaths were more likely to be missed than births. Neonatal and infant deaths were more likely to be missed than older deaths. CONCLUSION: This first test of the accuracy and completeness of vital events data reported by CHWs in Malawi as a strategy for monitoring child mortality shows promising results but underestimated child mortality and was not stable over the four periods assessed. Given the Malawi government's commitment to strengthen its vital registration system, we are working with the Ministry of Health to implement a revised version of the approach that provides increased support to CHWs.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3928330?pdf=render
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