Verbal autopsy to ascertain causes of neonatal deaths in a community setting: A study from Morang, Nepal

Authors

  • S Khanal Morang Innovative Neonatal Intervention/John Snow Inc. Research and Training Institute, Kathmandu
  • VS GC Morang Innovative Neonatal Intervention/John Snow Inc. Research and Training Institute, Kathmandu
  • P Dawson Morang Innovative Neonatal Intervention/John Snow Inc. Research and Training Institute, Kathmandu
  • R Houston Morang Innovative Neonatal Intervention/John Snow Inc. Research and Training Institute, Kathmandu

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31729/jnma.34

Abstract

Introduction: Clinical registration of the cause of death is available for less than one-third of the global newborn deaths, but the need for good quality data on causes of death for public health planning has renewed the interest in the Verbal Autopsy (VA). We aimed to determine the cause of neonatal deaths by VA in Morang district of Nepal.

Methods: Caretakers of the deceased were interviewed using a semi-structured VA questionnaire by female community health volunteers. The cause of death was assigned by two senior pediatricians independently and disagreements in ascertaining the proximate cause of death were resolved by consensus.

Results: The proximate causes of deaths were infections (41 %), birth asphyxia (37.2 %), prematurity (11.5 %), and low birth weight related causes (6.9 %). There was no signifi cant statistical difference in deaths due to infection seen in non-institutional deliveries (43.5 %) than institutional deliveries (34.6 %). More than half of the deaths (58.5 %) occurred within the fi rst three days of life where the predominant cause of death was birth asphyxia (60.7 %).

Conclusions: Analysis of verbal autopsies demonstrates that the major causes of death still are infections and birth asphyxia. The timing of deaths suggests that neonatal interventions should be aimed at the fi rst week of life. There is no comparative advantage between institutional deliveries at below district level institutions and non-institutional deliveries to prevent neonatal infection. Thus, further study on the quality of care at institutes below the district level should be conducted. Disparities still occur in deaths, with most deaths in Morang occurring in non-institutional deliveries and in disadvantaged groups.

Keywords: neonatal deaths, Nepal, newborn, verbal autopsy.

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Published

2011-03-31

How to Cite

Khanal, S., GC, V., Dawson, P., & Houston, R. (2011). Verbal autopsy to ascertain causes of neonatal deaths in a community setting: A study from Morang, Nepal. Journal of Nepal Medical Association, 51(181). https://doi.org/10.31729/jnma.34

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Original Article