Diagnostic accuracy of verbal autopsies in ascertaining the causes of stillbirths and neonatal deaths in rural Ghana.
Diagnostic accuracy of verbal autopsies in ascertaining the causes of stillbirths and neonatal deaths in rural Ghana.
This study evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of a verbal autopsy (VA) tool in ascertaining the causes of stillbirths and neonatal deaths in rural Ghana and was nested within a community-based maternal vitamin A supplementation trial (ObaapaVitA trial). All stillbirths and neonatal deaths between 1 January 2003 and 30 June 2004 were prospectively included. Community VAs were carried out within 6 months of death and were classified with a primary cause of death by three experienced paediatricans. The reference standard diagnosis was obtained by the study paediatrician in 4 district hospitals in the study area.
There were 20 317 deliveries, 661 stillbirths and 590 neonatal deaths with a VA diagnosis in the study population. A total of 311 stillbirths and 191 neonatal deaths had both a VA and a hospital reference standard diagnosis. The VA performed poorly for stillbirth diagnoses such as congenital abnormalities and maternal haemorrhage. Accuracy was higher for intrapartum obstetric complications and antepartum maternal disease. For neonatal deaths, sensitivity was >60% for all major causes; specificity was 76% for birth asphyxia but >85% for prematurity and infection. Overall, VA diagnostic accuracy was higher than expected in this rural African setting. Our classification system was based on the expected public health importance of the individual causes of death, differing implications for intervention and the ability to distinguish between the individual causes in low-resource settings. We believe this system was easier to use than traditional approaches and resulted in high precision and accuracy. However, further simplifications are needed to allow use of the World Health Organisation VA in routine child health programmes. The diagnostic accuracy of the VA tool should also be assessed in other regions and in multicentre studies.
417-429
Edmond, Karen M.
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Quigley, Maria A.
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Zandoh, Charles
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Danso, Samuel
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Hurt, Chris
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Agyei, Seth Owusu
585257f4-0c3c-478b-b7d9-819997c7f076
Kirkwood, Betty R.
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4 August 2008
Edmond, Karen M.
e3781f50-387f-4107-a15b-8f1a8773e420
Quigley, Maria A.
dfe70626-7d88-4986-9258-7dd479d02d31
Zandoh, Charles
c823fd4a-2cd2-4ba0-a604-7e37106fb9f3
Danso, Samuel
2054070b-8ef7-4d5a-a869-0c6585c8cf50
Hurt, Chris
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Agyei, Seth Owusu
585257f4-0c3c-478b-b7d9-819997c7f076
Kirkwood, Betty R.
1a1717ce-16e5-464c-aed6-b246b03ba413
Edmond, Karen M., Quigley, Maria A., Zandoh, Charles, Danso, Samuel, Hurt, Chris, Agyei, Seth Owusu and Kirkwood, Betty R.
(2008)
Diagnostic accuracy of verbal autopsies in ascertaining the causes of stillbirths and neonatal deaths in rural Ghana.
Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, 22 (5), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1365-3016.2008.00962.x).
Abstract
This study evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of a verbal autopsy (VA) tool in ascertaining the causes of stillbirths and neonatal deaths in rural Ghana and was nested within a community-based maternal vitamin A supplementation trial (ObaapaVitA trial). All stillbirths and neonatal deaths between 1 January 2003 and 30 June 2004 were prospectively included. Community VAs were carried out within 6 months of death and were classified with a primary cause of death by three experienced paediatricans. The reference standard diagnosis was obtained by the study paediatrician in 4 district hospitals in the study area.
There were 20 317 deliveries, 661 stillbirths and 590 neonatal deaths with a VA diagnosis in the study population. A total of 311 stillbirths and 191 neonatal deaths had both a VA and a hospital reference standard diagnosis. The VA performed poorly for stillbirth diagnoses such as congenital abnormalities and maternal haemorrhage. Accuracy was higher for intrapartum obstetric complications and antepartum maternal disease. For neonatal deaths, sensitivity was >60% for all major causes; specificity was 76% for birth asphyxia but >85% for prematurity and infection. Overall, VA diagnostic accuracy was higher than expected in this rural African setting. Our classification system was based on the expected public health importance of the individual causes of death, differing implications for intervention and the ability to distinguish between the individual causes in low-resource settings. We believe this system was easier to use than traditional approaches and resulted in high precision and accuracy. However, further simplifications are needed to allow use of the World Health Organisation VA in routine child health programmes. The diagnostic accuracy of the VA tool should also be assessed in other regions and in multicentre studies.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 4 August 2008
Published date: 4 August 2008
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Local EPrints ID: 488297
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488297
ISSN: 0269-5022
PURE UUID: ecef599c-ee57-4826-ad22-bdc93ac111bf
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Date deposited: 19 Mar 2024 18:12
Last modified: 23 Mar 2024 03:13
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Author:
Karen M. Edmond
Author:
Maria A. Quigley
Author:
Charles Zandoh
Author:
Samuel Danso
Author:
Chris Hurt
Author:
Seth Owusu Agyei
Author:
Betty R. Kirkwood
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