The Evolving Demographic and Health Transition in Four Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Evidence from Four Sites in the INDEPTH Network of Longitudinal Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems.
Date
2016
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Abstract
This paper contributes evidence documenting the continued decline in all-cause mortality
and changes in the cause of death distribution over time in four developing country populations
in Africa and Asia. We present levels and trends in age-specific mortality (all-cause
and cause-specific) from four demographic surveillance sites: Agincourt (South Africa),
Navrongo (Ghana) in Africa; Filabavi (Vietnam), Matlab (Bangladesh) in Asia. We model
mortality using discrete time event history analysis. This study illustrates how data from
INDEPTH Network centers can provide a comparative, longitudinal examination of mortality
patterns and the epidemiological transition. Health care systems need to be reconfigured to
deal simultaneously with continuing challenges of communicable disease and increasing
incidence of non-communicable diseases that require long-term care. In populations with
endemic HIV, long-term care of HIV patients on ART will add to the chronic care needs of
the community.
Description
Keywords
Health Transition, Demographic, Low- and Middle-Income, INDEPTH Network, Longitudinal Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems, Ghana, Navrongo, Vietnam, South Africa, Bangladesh
Citation
Bawah A, Houle B, Alam N, Razzaque A, Streatfield PK, Debpuur C, et al. (2016) The Evolving Demographic and Health Transition in Four Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Evidence from Four Sites in the INDEPTH Network of Longitudinal Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems. PLoS ONE 11 (6): e0157281. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0157281