Improving coverage of civil registration and vital statistics, Bangladesh

Bangladesh has no national system for registering deaths and determining their causes. As a result, policy-makers lack reliable and complete data to inform public health decisions. In 2016, the government of Bangladesh introduced a pilot project to strengthen the civil registration and vital statist...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bulletin of the World Health Organization 2019-09, Vol.97 (9), p.637-641
Hauptverfasser: Uddin, Moyeen, Ashrafi, Shah Ali Akbar, Azad, Abul Kalam, Chowdhury, Anir, Chowdhury, Hafizur Rahman, Riley, Ian Douglas, Montes, Andres, Bratschi, Martin, AbouZahr, Carla, Alam, Zeaul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bangladesh has no national system for registering deaths and determining their causes. As a result, policy-makers lack reliable and complete data to inform public health decisions. In 2016, the government of Bangladesh introduced a pilot project to strengthen the civil registration and vital statistics system and generate cause of death data in Kaliganj Upazila. Community-based health workers were trained to notify births and deaths to the civil registrar, and to conduct verbal autopsy interviews with family members of a deceased person. International experts in cause-of-death certification and coding trained master trainers on how to complete the international medical certificate of cause of death. These trainers then trained physicians and coders. Kaliganj Upazila has an estimated population of 304 600, and 5600 births and 1550 deaths annually. Health assistants and family welfare assistants make regular visits to households to track certain health outcomes. Following the start of the project in 2016, the number of births registered within 45 days rose from 873 to 4630 in 2018. The number of deaths registered within 45 days increased from 458 to 1404. During this period, health assistants conducted 7837 verbal autopsy interviews. Between January 2017 and December 2018, 105 master trainers and more than 7000 physicians were trained to complete the international medical certificate of cause of death and they completed more than 12 000 certificates. Training community-based health workers, physicians and coders were successful approaches to improve death registration completeness and availability of cause-of-death data.
ISSN:0042-9686
1564-0604
DOI:10.2471/BLT.18.219162