A systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agents

Background: Efforts to improve national civil registration and vital statistics (CRVS) systems are focusing on transforming traditionally passive systems into active systems that have the ability to reach the household level. While community health agents remain at the core of many birth and death r...

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Main Authors: Erin K. Nichols, Nina W. Ragunanthan, Braveen Ragunanthan, Hermon Gebrehiwet, Karim Kamara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Global Health Action
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2019.1597452
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spelling doaj-5730185a1d8a43f38f03590f0c8cb0592020-11-25T03:46:29ZengTaylor & Francis GroupGlobal Health Action1654-98802019-01-0112110.1080/16549716.2019.15974521597452A systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agentsErin K. Nichols0Nina W. Ragunanthan1Braveen Ragunanthan2Hermon Gebrehiwet3Karim Kamara4Centers for Disease Control and PreventionUniversity of Pittsburgh Medical Center Magee-Womens HospitalUniversity of Pittsburgh Medical Center Children’s Hospital of PittsburghArgosy UniversityShenandoah UniversityBackground: Efforts to improve national civil registration and vital statistics (CRVS) systems are focusing on transforming traditionally passive systems into active systems that have the ability to reach the household level. While community health agents remain at the core of many birth and death reporting efforts, previous literature has not explored elements for their successful integration into CRVS efforts. Objective: To inform future efforts to improve CRVS systems, we conducted a systematic review of literature to understand and describe the design features, resulting data quality, and factors impacting the performance of community health agents involved in tracking vital events. Methods: We reviewed 393 articles; reviewers extracted key information from 58 articles meeting the eligibility criteria: collection of birth and/or death information outside of a clinic environment by a community agent. Reviewers recorded information in an Excel database on various program aspects, and results were summarized into key themes and topic areas. Results: The majority of articles described work in rural areas of Africa or South-East Asia. Nearly all articles (86%) cited some form of household visitation by community health agents. Only one article described a process in which vital events tracking activities were linked to official vital events registers. Other factors commonly described included program costs, relationship of community agents to community, and use of mobile devices. About 1/3 of articles reported quantitative information on performance and quality of vital events data tracked; various methods were described for measuring completeness of reporting, which varied greatly across articles. Conclusions: The multitude of articles on this topic attests to the availability of community health agents to track vital events. Creating a programmatic norm of integrating with CRVS systems the vital events information collected from existing community health programs has the potential to provide governments with information essential for public health decision-making.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2019.1597452vital statisticsmortality surveillanceverbal autopsycommunity health workerscivil registration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erin K. Nichols
Nina W. Ragunanthan
Braveen Ragunanthan
Hermon Gebrehiwet
Karim Kamara
spellingShingle Erin K. Nichols
Nina W. Ragunanthan
Braveen Ragunanthan
Hermon Gebrehiwet
Karim Kamara
A systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agents
Global Health Action
vital statistics
mortality surveillance
verbal autopsy
community health workers
civil registration
author_facet Erin K. Nichols
Nina W. Ragunanthan
Braveen Ragunanthan
Hermon Gebrehiwet
Karim Kamara
author_sort Erin K. Nichols
title A systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agents
title_short A systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agents
title_full A systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agents
title_fullStr A systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agents
title_full_unstemmed A systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agents
title_sort systematic review of vital events tracking by community health agents
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Global Health Action
issn 1654-9880
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Background: Efforts to improve national civil registration and vital statistics (CRVS) systems are focusing on transforming traditionally passive systems into active systems that have the ability to reach the household level. While community health agents remain at the core of many birth and death reporting efforts, previous literature has not explored elements for their successful integration into CRVS efforts. Objective: To inform future efforts to improve CRVS systems, we conducted a systematic review of literature to understand and describe the design features, resulting data quality, and factors impacting the performance of community health agents involved in tracking vital events. Methods: We reviewed 393 articles; reviewers extracted key information from 58 articles meeting the eligibility criteria: collection of birth and/or death information outside of a clinic environment by a community agent. Reviewers recorded information in an Excel database on various program aspects, and results were summarized into key themes and topic areas. Results: The majority of articles described work in rural areas of Africa or South-East Asia. Nearly all articles (86%) cited some form of household visitation by community health agents. Only one article described a process in which vital events tracking activities were linked to official vital events registers. Other factors commonly described included program costs, relationship of community agents to community, and use of mobile devices. About 1/3 of articles reported quantitative information on performance and quality of vital events data tracked; various methods were described for measuring completeness of reporting, which varied greatly across articles. Conclusions: The multitude of articles on this topic attests to the availability of community health agents to track vital events. Creating a programmatic norm of integrating with CRVS systems the vital events information collected from existing community health programs has the potential to provide governments with information essential for public health decision-making.
topic vital statistics
mortality surveillance
verbal autopsy
community health workers
civil registration
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2019.1597452
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