#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

Young Children's Probability of Dying Before and After Their Mother's Death: A Rural South African Population-Based Surveillance Study


Background:
There is evidence that a young child's risk of dying increases following the mother's death, but little is known about the risk when the mother becomes very ill prior to her death. We hypothesized that children would be more likely to die during the period several months before their mother's death, as well as for several months after her death. Therefore we investigated the relationship between young children's likelihood of dying and the timing of their mother's death and, in particular, the existence of a critical period of increased risk.

Methods and Findings:
Data from a health and socio-demographic surveillance system in rural South Africa were collected on children 0–5 y of age from 1 January 1994 to 31 December 2008. Discrete time survival analysis was used to estimate children's probability of dying before and after their mother's death, accounting for moderators. 1,244 children (3% of sample) died from 1994 to 2008. The probability of child death began to rise 6–11 mo prior to the mother's death and increased markedly during the 2 mo immediately before the month of her death (odds ratio [OR] 7.1 [95% CI 3.9–12.7]), in the month of her death (OR 12.6 [6.2–25.3]), and during the 2 mo following her death (OR 7.0 [3.2–15.6]). This increase in the probability of dying was more pronounced for children whose mothers died of AIDS or tuberculosis compared to other causes of death, but the pattern remained for causes unrelated to AIDS/tuberculosis. Infants aged 0–6 mo at the time of their mother's death were nine times more likely to die than children aged 2–5 y. The limitations of the study included the lack of knowledge about precisely when a very ill mother will die, a lack of information about child nutrition and care, and the diagnosis of AIDS deaths by verbal autopsy rather than serostatus.

Conclusions:
Young children in lower income settings are more likely to die not only after their mother's death but also in the months before, when she is seriously ill. Interventions are urgently needed to support families both when the mother becomes very ill and after her death.



Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary


Vyšlo v časopise: Young Children's Probability of Dying Before and After Their Mother's Death: A Rural South African Population-Based Surveillance Study. PLoS Med 10(3): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001409
Kategorie: Research Article
prolekare.web.journal.doi_sk: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001409

Souhrn

Background:
There is evidence that a young child's risk of dying increases following the mother's death, but little is known about the risk when the mother becomes very ill prior to her death. We hypothesized that children would be more likely to die during the period several months before their mother's death, as well as for several months after her death. Therefore we investigated the relationship between young children's likelihood of dying and the timing of their mother's death and, in particular, the existence of a critical period of increased risk.

Methods and Findings:
Data from a health and socio-demographic surveillance system in rural South Africa were collected on children 0–5 y of age from 1 January 1994 to 31 December 2008. Discrete time survival analysis was used to estimate children's probability of dying before and after their mother's death, accounting for moderators. 1,244 children (3% of sample) died from 1994 to 2008. The probability of child death began to rise 6–11 mo prior to the mother's death and increased markedly during the 2 mo immediately before the month of her death (odds ratio [OR] 7.1 [95% CI 3.9–12.7]), in the month of her death (OR 12.6 [6.2–25.3]), and during the 2 mo following her death (OR 7.0 [3.2–15.6]). This increase in the probability of dying was more pronounced for children whose mothers died of AIDS or tuberculosis compared to other causes of death, but the pattern remained for causes unrelated to AIDS/tuberculosis. Infants aged 0–6 mo at the time of their mother's death were nine times more likely to die than children aged 2–5 y. The limitations of the study included the lack of knowledge about precisely when a very ill mother will die, a lack of information about child nutrition and care, and the diagnosis of AIDS deaths by verbal autopsy rather than serostatus.

Conclusions:
Young children in lower income settings are more likely to die not only after their mother's death but also in the months before, when she is seriously ill. Interventions are urgently needed to support families both when the mother becomes very ill and after her death.



Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary


Zdroje

1. RonsmansC, ChowdhuryME, DasguptaSK, AhmedA, KoblinskyM (2010) Effect of parent's death on child survival in rural Bangladesh: a cohort study. Lancet 375: 2024–2031.

2. NewellML, BrahmbhattH, GhysPD (2004) Child mortality and HIV infection in Africa: a review. AIDS 18: S27.

3. TollmanSM, KahnK, GarenneM, GearJSS (1999) Reversal in mortality trends: evidence from the Agincourt field site, South Africa, 1992–1995. AIDS 13: 1091–1097.

4. TollmanSM, KahnK, SartoriusB, CollinsonMA, ClarkSJ, et al. (2008) Implications of mortality transition for primary health care in rural South Africa: a population-based surveillance study. Lancet 372: 893–901.

5. BoermaJT, NunnAJ, WhitworthJ (1998) Mortality impact of the AIDS epidemic: evidence from community studies in less developed countries. AIDS 12: S3.

6. MarstonM, ZabaB, SalomonJA, BrahmbhattH, BagendaD (2005) Estimating the net effect of HIV on child mortality in African populations affected by generalized HIV epidemics. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 38: 219.

7. McIntyreJ (2003) Mothers infected with HIV. Br Med Bull 67: 127.

8. RonsmansC, GrahamWJ (2006) Maternal mortality: who, when, where, and why. Lancet 368: 1189–1200.

9. JanssenN, NdiranguJ, NewellML, BlandRM (2010) Successful paediatric HIV treatment in rural primary care in Africa. Arch Dis Child 95: 414.

10. NdiranguJ, NewellML, TanserF, HerbstAJ, BlandR (2010) Decline in early life mortality in a high HIV prevalence rural area of South Africa: evidence of HIV prevention or treatment impact? AIDS 24: 593.

11. AndersonFWJ, MortonSU, NaikS, GebrianB (2007) Maternal mortality and the consequences on infant and child survival in rural Haiti. Matern Child Health J 11: 395–401.

12. PavardS, GagnonA, DesjardinsB, HeyerE (2005) Mother's death and child survival: the case of early Quebec. J Biosoc Sci 37: 209–227.

13. ZabaB, WhitworthJ, MarstonM, NakiyingiJ, RuberantwariA, et al. (2005) HIV and mortality of mothers and children: evidence from cohort studies in Uganda, Tanzania, and Malawi. Epidemiology 16: 275–280.

14. FarmerP, LéandreF, MukherjeeJS, ClaudeM, NevilP, et al. (2001) Community-based approaches to HIV treatment in resource-poor settings. Lancet 358: 404–409.

15. KahnK, CollinsonMA, Gomez-OliveFX, MokoenaO, TwineR, et al. (2012) Profile: Agincourt health and socio-demographic surveillance system. Int J Epidemiol 41: 988–1001.

16. KahnK, TollmanSM, CollinsonMA, ClarkSJ, TwineR, et al. (2007) Research into health, population and social transitions in rural South Africa: data and methods of the Agincourt health and demographic surveillance system. Scand J Public Health Suppl 69: 8–20.

17. KahnK, TollmanSM, GarenneM, GearJS (2000) Validation and application of verbal autopsies in a rural area of South Africa. Trop Med Int Health 5: 824–831.

18. HosegoodV, VannesteAM, TimaeusIM (2004) Levels and causes of adult mortality in rural South Africa: the impact of AIDS. AIDS 18: 663–671.

19. SetelPW, WhitingDR, HemedY, ChandramohanD, WolfsonLJ, et al. (2006) Validity of verbal autopsy procedures for determining cause of death in Tanzania. Trop Med Int Health 11: 681–696.

20. National Department of Health (2009) 2008 national antenatal sentinel HIV and syphilis prevalence survey: South Africa report. Pretoria: National Department of Health.

21. Allison PD (1984) Event history analysis: regression for longitudinal event data. Thousand Oaks (California): Sage.

22. StataCorp (2007) Stata statistical software: release 10 [computer program]. College Station (Texas): StataCorp.

23. VolinskyCT, RafteryAE (2000) Bayesian information criterion for censored survival models. Biometrics 56: 256–262.

24. AhmadOB, LopezAD, InoueM (2000) The decline in child mortality: a reappraisal. Bull World Health Organ 78: 1175–1191.

25. MurrayCJL, LaaksoT, ShibuyaK, HillK, LopezAD (2007) Can we achieve Millennium Development Goal 4? New analysis of country trends and forecasts of under-5 mortality to 2015. Lancet 370: 1040–1054.

26. StaneckiK, DaherJ, StoverJ, AkwaraP, MahyM (2010) Under-5 mortality due to HIV: regional levels and 1990–2009 trends. Sex Transm Infect 86 (Suppl 2) ii56–ii61.

27. Bowlby J (1969) Attachment and loss, volume 1. New York: Basic Books.

28. Graff Zivin JS, Thirumurthy H, Goldstein M (2006) AIDS treatment and intrahousehold resource allocations: children's nutrition and schooling in Kenya. Cambridge (Massachusetts): National Bureau of Economic Research.

29. GrayGE, Van NiekerkR, StruthersH, ViolariA, MartinsonN, et al. (2006) The effects of adult morbidity and mortality on household welfare and the well-being of children in Soweto. Vulnerable Child Youth Stud 1: 15–28.

30. BlackRE, MorrisSS, BryceJ (2003) Where and why are 10 million children dying every year? Lancet 361: 2226–2234.

31. SchatzE, OgunmefunC (2007) Caring and contributing: the role of older women in rural South African multi-generational households in the HIV/AIDS era. World Dev 35: 1390–1403.

32. GoudgeJ, GilsonL, RussellS, GumedeT, MillsA (2009) The household costs of health care in rural South Africa with free public primary care and hospital exemptions for the poor. Trop Med Int Health 14: 458–467.

33. HunterLM, TwineW, PattersonL (2007) “Locusts are now our beef”: adult mortality and household dietary use of local environmental resources in rural South Africa1. Scand J Public Health Suppl 69: 165–174.

34. RussellS (2004) The economic burden of illness for households in developing countries: a review of studies focusing on malaria, tuberculosis, and human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Am J Trop Med Hyg 71: 147–155.

35. HunterL, TwineW, JohnsonA (2011) Adult mortality and natural resource use in rural South Africa: evidence from the Agincourt health and demographic surveillance site. Soc Nat Resour 24: 256–275.

36. McLoydVC (1998) Socioeconomic disadvantage and child development. Am Psychol 53: 185.

37. Richter LM (1994) Economic stress and its influence on the family and caretaking patterns. In: Dawes A, Donald DR, editors. Childhood and adversity in South Africa: psychological perspectives from South African research. Cape Town: David Philip. pp. 28–50.

38. JakobsenMS, SodemannM, MolbakK, AabyP (1996) Reason for termination of breastfeeding and the length of breastfeeding. Int J Epidemiol 25: 115–121.

39. RahmanA, IqbalZ, BunnJ, LovelH, HarringtonR (2004) Impact of maternal depression on infant nutritional status and illness: a cohort study. Arch Gen Psychiatry 61: 946–952.

40. ReidA (2005) The effects of the 1918–1919 influenza pandemic on infant and child health in Derbyshire. Med Hist 49: 29–54.

41. Joint Learning Initiative on Children and HIV/AIDS (2009) Home truths: facing the facts on children, AIDS, and poverty. Final report of the Joint Learning Initiative on Children and HIV/AIDS. Available: http://www.unicef.org/aids/files/JLICAFinalReport_Feb2009.pdf. Accessed 19 February 2013.

42. GrantL, BrownJ, LengM, BettegaN, MurraySA (2011) Palliative care making a difference in rural Uganda, Kenya and Malawi: three rapid evaluation field studies. BMC Palliat Care 10: 8.

43. SelmanLE, HigginsonIJ, AgupioG, DinatN, DowningJ, et al. (2011) Quality of life among patients receiving palliative care in South Africa and Uganda: a multi-centred study. Health Qual Life Outcomes 9: 21.

44. World Health Organization (2008) Task shifting: rational redistribution of tasks among health workforce teams. Global recommendations and guidelines. Geneva: World Health Organization.

45. HuichoL, ScherpbierRW, NkowaneAM, VictoraCG (2008) How much does quality of child care vary between health workers with differing durations of training? An observational multicountry study. Lancet 372: 910–916.

46. McPakeB, MensahK (2008) Task shifting in health care in resource-poor countries. Lancet 372: 870–871.

47. NdiranguJ, NewellML, ThorneC, BlandR (2012) Treating HIV-infected mothers reduces under 5 years of age mortality rates to levels seen in children of HIV-uninfected mothers in rural South Africa. Antivir Ther 17: 81.

48. CaseA, MenendezA (2007) Does money empower the elderly? Evidence from the Agincourt demographic surveillance site, South Africa. Scand J Public Health Suppl 69: 157–164.

49. CaseA, HosegoodV, LundF (2005) The reach and impact of Child Support Grants: evidence from KwaZulu-Natal. Dev South Afr 22: 467–482.

50. South African Social Security Agency (2011) You and your grants 2011/12. Available: http://www.sassa.gov.za/Portals/1/Documents/d54e383b-7e3d-4c96-8aa2-4cc7d32bc78f.pdf. Accessed 25 February 2013.

51. United Nations Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS (2010) UNAIDS report on the global AIDS epidemic 2010. Available: http://www.unaids.org/globalreport/global_report.htm. Accessed 19 February 2013.

Štítky
Interné lekárstvo

Článok vyšiel v časopise

PLOS Medicine


2013 Číslo 3
Najčítanejšie tento týždeň
Najčítanejšie v tomto čísle
Kurzy

Zvýšte si kvalifikáciu online z pohodlia domova

Aktuální možnosti diagnostiky a léčby litiáz
nový kurz
Autori: MUDr. Tomáš Ürge, PhD.

Všetky kurzy
Prihlásenie
Zabudnuté heslo

Zadajte e-mailovú adresu, s ktorou ste vytvárali účet. Budú Vám na ňu zasielané informácie k nastaveniu nového hesla.

Prihlásenie

Nemáte účet?  Registrujte sa

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#