Monitoring Change in Child Mortality through Household Surveys.

Most low- and middle-income countries lack fully functional civil registration systems. Measures of under-five mortality are typically derived from periodic household surveys collecting detailed information from women on births and child deaths. However, such surveys are expensive and are not approp...

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Main Authors: Kenneth Hill, Eoghan Brady, Linnea Zimmerman, Livia Montana, Romesh Silva, Agbessi Amouzou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4659642?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-93651afde0b44d7d83da76822a98c7132020-11-25T02:08:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011011e013771310.1371/journal.pone.0137713Monitoring Change in Child Mortality through Household Surveys.Kenneth HillEoghan BradyLinnea ZimmermanLivia MontanaRomesh SilvaAgbessi AmouzouMost low- and middle-income countries lack fully functional civil registration systems. Measures of under-five mortality are typically derived from periodic household surveys collecting detailed information from women on births and child deaths. However, such surveys are expensive and are not appropriate for monitoring short-term changes in child mortality. We explored and tested the validity of two new analysis methods for less-expensive summary histories of births and child deaths for such monitoring in five African countries.The first method we explored uses individual-level survey data on births and child deaths to impute full birth histories from an earlier survey onto summary histories from a more recent survey. The second method uses cohort changes between two surveys in the average number of children born and the number of children dead by single year of age to estimate under-five mortality for the inter-survey period. The first method produces acceptable annual estimates of under-five mortality for two out of six applications to available data sets; the second method produced an acceptable estimate in only one of five applications, though none of the applications used ideal data sets.The methods we tested were not able to produce consistently good quality estimates of annual under-five mortality from summary birth history data. The key problem we identified was not with the methods themselves, but with the underlying quality of the summary birth histories. If summary birth histories are to be included in general household surveys, considerable emphasis must be placed on quality control.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4659642?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kenneth Hill
Eoghan Brady
Linnea Zimmerman
Livia Montana
Romesh Silva
Agbessi Amouzou
spellingShingle Kenneth Hill
Eoghan Brady
Linnea Zimmerman
Livia Montana
Romesh Silva
Agbessi Amouzou
Monitoring Change in Child Mortality through Household Surveys.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kenneth Hill
Eoghan Brady
Linnea Zimmerman
Livia Montana
Romesh Silva
Agbessi Amouzou
author_sort Kenneth Hill
title Monitoring Change in Child Mortality through Household Surveys.
title_short Monitoring Change in Child Mortality through Household Surveys.
title_full Monitoring Change in Child Mortality through Household Surveys.
title_fullStr Monitoring Change in Child Mortality through Household Surveys.
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring Change in Child Mortality through Household Surveys.
title_sort monitoring change in child mortality through household surveys.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Most low- and middle-income countries lack fully functional civil registration systems. Measures of under-five mortality are typically derived from periodic household surveys collecting detailed information from women on births and child deaths. However, such surveys are expensive and are not appropriate for monitoring short-term changes in child mortality. We explored and tested the validity of two new analysis methods for less-expensive summary histories of births and child deaths for such monitoring in five African countries.The first method we explored uses individual-level survey data on births and child deaths to impute full birth histories from an earlier survey onto summary histories from a more recent survey. The second method uses cohort changes between two surveys in the average number of children born and the number of children dead by single year of age to estimate under-five mortality for the inter-survey period. The first method produces acceptable annual estimates of under-five mortality for two out of six applications to available data sets; the second method produced an acceptable estimate in only one of five applications, though none of the applications used ideal data sets.The methods we tested were not able to produce consistently good quality estimates of annual under-five mortality from summary birth history data. The key problem we identified was not with the methods themselves, but with the underlying quality of the summary birth histories. If summary birth histories are to be included in general household surveys, considerable emphasis must be placed on quality control.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4659642?pdf=render
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