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Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji Regional Adviser Evidence and Natinal Health Oservatories (ENO) WHO Regional Office for Africa COIA Sub-Regional Workshop. Harare, Zimbabwe, 01-03 October 2012

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Page 1: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji Regional Adviser

Evidence and Natinal Health Oservatories (ENO) WHO Regional Office for Africa

COIA Sub-Regional Workshop. Harare, Zimbabwe, 01-03 October 2012

Page 2: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

UN Commission on Information and Accountability

for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011

COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better results

“Vital events: By 2015, all countries have taken significant steps to establish a system for registration of births, deaths and causes of death, and have well-functioning health information systems that combine data from facilities, administrative sources and surveys”

Page 3: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

VITAL EVENTS

Vital events is essentially about

Births, Death and Causes of death.

Page 4: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Vital events data provide key health status indicators

1. Birth : – Adolescent birth rate MDG 5 indicator

2. Mortality: – Under-5 mortality rate (U5MR) – Infant mortality rate (IMR) – Maternal mortality ratio (MMR) – Life expectancy (e0) – Adult mortality rate (45q15) – Neonatal mortality rate (NMR)

3. Causes of Death: – Incidence and death rates associated with malaria – Incidence, prevalence and death rates associated

with tuberculosis

MDG 4 & 5 indicators

MDG 6 indicators

Page 5: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Public health importance of cause of death data

• Monitor the health of the population – Leading causes of death

– Mortality rates (geographic variations)

– Trends over time

• Inform decisions about health policy and strategy – Prevent premature deaths

– Service provision

– Health budgets

• Evaluate health service outcomes

Page 6: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Why vital statistics data are important (1)

• Used to derive demographic and epidemiologic measures needed in national planning in health

• Understanding the – prevalence and distribution of mortality, – emerging health challenges (NCDs, HIV/AIDS, Injuries,…)

• Identification of health inequalities and priorities, • Monitoring of trends and progress towards MDGs • Evaluation of the impact and effectiveness of health

programmes including tracking of health reforms • Complete and Accurate measures of infant, child, and

maternal mortality.

Page 7: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Not only health:

• Education

• Labour

• Other government activities

• Commercial enterprises (e.g. life insurance, marketing of products).

• Tracking national processes such as poverty reduction strategies, and development efforts overall

Why vital statistics data are important (2)

Page 8: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CRVS) System

• Statistics on births and deaths are recorded through the government’s civil registration system Permanent Record (PR) of each event

• Two primary uses of PR:

– Personal legal documents for every citizen

– Basis of the vital statistics system, core of a country’s HIS

CIVIL REGISTRATION RECORDS = Best source for Vital statistics data.

Page 9: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Health sector needs

• Mortality and cause of death data are foundation for health planning, monitoring and evaluation: this includes MDGs, national health plans, evaluation studies

• Levels, trends and differentials (equity) for mortality indicators:

– Mortality rates • key indicators: Neonatal, infant and child mortality, adult mortality, life

expectancy…

– Causes of death, including maternal mortality, infectious diseases, NCD, injuries…

• Disaggregation essential: by age and sex, by cause, by geographic location, socio-economic factors

Page 10: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Current situation CRVS

• Most countries in the region do not have well functioning systems

• Birth registration and death registration levels are low

• There are no/very few vital statistics generated from the civil registration systems

• Cause of death information is not available, or of poor quality (from hospitals but not using ICD) – Many cases of reporting causes of death still have at least

one error!!

Page 11: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Coverage of births and deaths in AFR, 2000-2008

Coverage of deaths in AFR, 2000-2008

Birth and death registration levels are still low

Page 12: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Cause of death information is not available, or of poor quality

Quality of globally available information on causes of death

Page 13: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Mortality data sources

• CRVS: best source if complete and high quality system

• Household surveys and censuses: main source for most countries in the region

– Recent household deaths, birth and sibling histories…

• Hospital data: Reporting of causes of deaths

• Health and demographic surveillance studies: local only

– INDEPTH network, use of verbal autopsy…

Page 14: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Health Sector: A major producer of CRVS data

Health sector produces birth, death and causes of death data through:

1. Hospital reporting

• Complete reporting by hospitals of births and deaths • Causes of death, using the ICD 10

2. Community reporting: CHWs; with electronic devices... Most deaths and births occur at home, outside health facilities

• Community reporting of birth and deaths: first line for reporting

• Verbal autopsy when there is a death

Page 15: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

STRENGTHENING THE CRVS SYSTEM:

• Assessment

• Reporting

• Data

Page 16: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

• Focus is on births, deaths, causes of death

• Built on global standards developed by UN and WHO

Describes standards against which to assess country CRVS systems

Identify gaps and weaknesses in birth, death and cause-of-death statistics and the system that produces them

Actively involve multisectoral stakeholders

Generate evidence for an improvement strategy

Suggest a roadmap to follow

http://www.uq.edu.au/hishub/theme3

Strengthening CRVS Systems (1): Assessment

A comprehensive, standards-based framework

Page 17: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

1. Assessment of current status and practices – Rapid assessment often done

to raise awareness and advocacy for CRVS

– Full assessment forms the basis for a plan

2. National plan for strengthening CRVS

• Developed with all relevant stake holders

• Costing 3. Strong coordination

mechanism 4. Political (and financial)

commitment from the government (can never be donor driven)

Page 18: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Process for reviewing civil registration and vital statistics systems

Page 19: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Process for reviewing civil registration and vital statistics systems

Page 20: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

5. Hospital reporting

• Complete reporting by hospitals of births and deaths

• Causes of death using the ICD 10

6. Community reporting

• Most deaths and births occur at home, outside health facilities

• Community reporting of birth and deaths, e.g. CHWs and with electronic devices

• Verbal autopsy if there is a death

Strengthening CRVS Systems (2): Reporting

Page 21: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Immediate cause on top line

Any causal sequence with underlying cause

Contributing cause but not in causal sequence

in Part 2

Page 22: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Attending doctor: • Establish diagnosis • Complete medical certificate of cause (International form –

WHO)

Coding by Statistical Office: • Code causes of death (ICD code for each cause listed) • Classify cause of death (select a single underlying cause of

death for stats according to ICD selection rules) • Check validity, query

Analysis by Statistical Office: • Tabulate and disseminate data

Source: Adapted from Johansson LA, 2008

Main stages in production of cause of death

statistics

Page 23: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Practices affecting the quality of cause-of-death data

• Access to cause-of-death information • Would HIV/AIDS or suicide be assigned to a more socially

acceptable cause of death? • Does the death certificate state whether a woman was

pregnant or had recently been pregnant? Are maternal deaths reviewed separately?

• Are perinatal deaths monitored using a special form that obtains details about the mother as well as the baby?

• What training do doctors receive in COD certification? • Has there been an evaluation of the quality of medical

certification? • Who certifies whether the cause of death is natural or

unnatural? How well does this system work? Are certifying doctors aware of how this system works?

Page 24: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

7. Vital statistics • Data quality assessment of birth and death data

is critical as no system will be perfect

• Vital statistics from Civil Registration need to be produced regularly

8. Community reporting • If there is no good CRVS, health and

demographic surveillance sites can be used to obtain intermediate data

• Many countries have such HDSS but the data are not used

Strengthening CRVS Systems (3): Data

Page 25: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Who is involved in CRVS? Government: CR Authority/Dept. National Statistics Office Ministry of Health Ministry Interior Ministry of Local Government Ministry of Justice Min. of Information Ministry of Finance Ministry of Planning Academia Research National Identification Agency

Others:

• Citizens Non-citizens • Civil Society • Community/Tradiotional/Religiou

s Leader • Development Partners • UN Agencies (UNFPA, UNICEF,

WHO, UNDP, UNAIDS, UNHCR) • Developmnet Banks • Private Sector • ICT Companies • Education Sector • The Press and Media Practitioners • Community Workers and

Community voluteers

Page 26: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Interventions

1. Strengthening health information systems:

Better information Better actions to improve quality of care Prevent future deaths...

• Data quality gaps: relevance, accuracy and punctuality

– Quality of death & causes of death statistics • Deaths that occur outside hospital (verbal autopsy , …) • Mortality coding practice

• Harmonization of HIS

2. Develop a framework for integration of CRVS and health systems

Civil registration records Best source for vital statistics data Health sector a major contributor to CRVS systems

Page 27: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Opportunities Initiatives and programmes from WHO and partners:

• Available tools to improve CRVS data:

– A comprehensive, standards-based framework to improve quality of birth, death and cause-of-death information

– WHO verbal autopsy standard, based on ICD10

• MoVE-IT Initiative: Monitoring of Vital Events through Innovation/IT; working with countries to enhance CRVS including innovative reporting systems - HMN/ WHO

• African Health Observatory: WHO platform for assessment, promotion, sharing and use of information, evidence and knowledge for health (http://www.aho.afro.who.int) – National Health Observatories: one-stop shop repository of country

health information and data

Page 28: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

National Health Observatory: A key role to Integration of CRVS and health

• Birth, death and causes of death registration and statistics (including data quality gaps) – Provide the most accurate, up-to-date and relevant data

from all sources on one unique national platform

• Monitoring of vital events – Monitoring health status of the population including

progress towards MDGs, by regularly providing trends and situation analyses

– Makes standards and tools available

• Advocacy and accountability – Make translated information openly available to all potential

users/reviewers – Provide an open space for networks and CoPs

Page 29: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Regional Commitments

• UN Commission on Information and Accountability of Women and Children’s Health (COIA) Recommendations

• Statistical Commission for Africa: priority on CRVS

–UNECA: African Programme for Acceleration of Improvement of CRVS (APAI-CRVS)

• African Symposia for Statistical Development (ASSD): CRVS priority (Cape Town, Jan, 2012)

• Recommendations from the 2nd African Conference for Ministers in charge of CRVS (Sept 2012)

Page 30: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

10/10/2012 30

Monitoring of vital events using Standards and Tools: Assessment, Quality Control, Mobile Devices

Need for functional Civil Registration - Vital Statistics systems in Countries

Generate Evidence on what works: building upon existing work or systems

CONCLUSION

Page 31: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

Perspectives

• Assessment of CRVS

• Plan for strengthening CRVS

• Coordination mechanism

• Commitment

• Hospital reporting

• Community reporting

• Vital Statistics

• Local Studies

Self assessment report and country road map to strengthen CRVS

Page 32: Dr Peter Ebongue Mbondji - WHO · UN Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health - 2011 COIA Recommendation 1: Better Information for better

THANK YOU !

Peter E. MBONDJI: [email protected] – African Health Observatory (http://www.aho.afro.who.int)

http://www.afro.who.int