Houweling Tanja A J, Kunst Anton E, Moser Kath, Mackenbach Johan P
Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Trop Med Int Health. 2006 Aug;11(8):1218-27. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2006.01676.x.
To identify the socioeconomic and geographical groups in which the recent under-5 mortality increase observed in several African countries was most pronounced, and to explore the contribution of a number of proximate determinants of under-5 mortality.
Time trends in under-5 mortality were assessed with Cox Proportional Hazards regression analysis, using Demographic and Health Surveys data for Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d'lvoire, Kenya and Zimbabwe for the late 1980s - 1990s. We tested for differences in time trends between socioeconomic and rural/urban subgroups, and described the inequalities in time trends in living conditions, malnutrition and health care use.
Under-5 mortality increased substantially (ranging from 25% to 71% in 10 years) within the five countries. In Kenya, the increase was the largest among children born to less educated mothers (test for difference between educational groups: P = 0.074) and in rural areas (P = 0.090). In Cameroon, the increase was the largest among the higher educated (P = 0.013), and in Zimbabwe among the higher educated (P = 0.098) and in urban areas (P = 0.093). For Burkina Faso and Côte d'Ivoire, we did not observe statistically significant differences between educational and rural/urban subgroups. The decline in skilled delivery attendance in Zimbabwe and Kenya was similar among the less and higher educated. The decline in immunization coverage during the mid-1990s in Zimbabwe was the largest in the group with the highest mortality increase, but in Kenya it was as large among the less and higher educated. Whereas in Kenya the increase in malnutrition was the largest in the group with the highest mortality increase, this was not the case in Zimbabwe.
The recent increase in under-5 mortality in some African countries was highly concentrated in specific population subgroups. Exactly which groups were most affected was highly variable. It cannot be assumed that lower socioeconomic groups are always most vulnerable. Strategies to halt the under-5 mortality increase should be based on disaggregate information for individual countries.
确定在几个非洲国家近期观察到的5岁以下儿童死亡率上升最为明显的社会经济和地理群体,并探讨一些5岁以下儿童死亡率的直接决定因素的作用。
使用布基纳法索、喀麦隆、科特迪瓦、肯尼亚和津巴布韦20世纪80年代末至90年代的人口与健康调查数据,通过Cox比例风险回归分析评估5岁以下儿童死亡率的时间趋势。我们测试了社会经济和农村/城市亚组之间时间趋势的差异,并描述了生活条件、营养不良和医疗保健使用方面时间趋势的不平等情况。
这五个国家的5岁以下儿童死亡率大幅上升(10年内上升幅度从25%到71%不等)。在肯尼亚,受教育程度较低的母亲所生儿童(教育组间差异检验:P = 0.074)以及农村地区(P = 0.090)的死亡率上升幅度最大。在喀麦隆,受教育程度较高者中死亡率上升幅度最大(P = 0.013),在津巴布韦,受教育程度较高者(P = 0.098)以及城市地区(P = 0.093)中死亡率上升幅度最大。对于布基纳法索和科特迪瓦,我们未观察到教育和农村/城市亚组之间存在统计学上的显著差异。在津巴布韦和肯尼亚,受教育程度较低和较高者中熟练接生率的下降情况相似。20世纪90年代中期津巴布韦免疫接种覆盖率的下降在死亡率上升幅度最大的群体中最为明显,但在肯尼亚,受教育程度较低和较高者中的下降幅度相同。在肯尼亚,营养不良增加幅度最大的是死亡率上升幅度最大的群体,但在津巴布韦并非如此。
近期一些非洲国家5岁以下儿童死亡率的上升高度集中在特定人群亚组中。具体哪些群体受影响最大差异很大。不能假定社会经济地位较低的群体总是最脆弱的。遏制5岁以下儿童死亡率上升的策略应基于各个国家的分类信息。