Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
Division of Global Health Protection, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
BMJ Open. 2021 May 13;11(5):e042976. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042976.
To understand the barriers contributing to the more than threefold decline in the number of deaths (of all causes) reported to a national toll free telephone line (1-1-7) after the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak ended in Sierra Leone and explore opportunities for improving routine death reporting as part of a nationwide mortality surveillance system.
An exploratory qualitative assessment comprising 32 in-depth interviews (16 in Kenema district and 16 in Western Area). All interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed using qualitative content analysis to identify themes.
Participants were selected from urban and rural communities in two districts that experienced varying levels of Ebola cases during the outbreak. All interviews were conducted in August 2017 in the post-Ebola-outbreak context in Sierra Leone when the Sierra Leone Ministry of Health and Sanitation was continuing to mandate reporting of all deaths.
Family members of deceased persons whose deaths were not reported to the 1-1-7 system.
Death reporting barriers were driven by the lack of awareness to report all deaths, lack of services linked to reporting, negative experiences from the Ebola outbreak including prohibition of traditional burial rituals, perception that inevitable deaths do not need to be reported and situations where prompt burials may be needed. Facilitators of future willingness to report deaths were largely influenced by the perceived communicability and severity of the disease, unexplained circumstances of the death that need investigation and the potential to leverage existing death notification practices through local leaders.
Social mobilisation and risk communication efforts are needed to help the public understand the importance and benefits of sustained and ongoing death reporting after an Ebola outbreak. Localised practices for informal death notification through community leaders could be integrated into the formal reporting system to capture community-based deaths that may otherwise be missed.
了解导致 2014-2016 年塞拉利昂埃博拉疫情结束后,全国免费电话热线(1-1-7)报告的死亡人数(所有原因)减少三倍以上的原因,并探讨改善常规死亡报告的机会,作为全国死亡率监测系统的一部分。
一项探索性定性评估,包括 32 次深入访谈(在凯内马区和西部地区各 16 次)。所有访谈均进行录音、转录,并使用定性内容分析进行分析,以确定主题。
参与者从两个地区的城乡社区中选出,这些社区在疫情期间经历了不同程度的埃博拉病例。所有访谈均于 2017 年 8 月在塞拉利昂埃博拉疫情后进行,当时塞拉利昂卫生部和卫生部继续要求报告所有死亡。
死者的家庭成员,其死亡未向 1-1-7 系统报告。
死亡报告障碍是由于缺乏报告所有死亡的意识、缺乏与报告相关的服务、埃博拉疫情期间的负面经验,包括禁止传统葬礼仪式、认为不可避免的死亡不需要报告以及需要及时进行葬礼的情况。未来报告死亡的意愿的促进因素主要受疾病的可传播性和严重性、需要调查的死亡不明情况以及通过当地领导人利用现有死亡通知做法的潜力的影响。
需要进行社会动员和风险沟通工作,以帮助公众了解在埃博拉疫情后持续和持续进行死亡报告的重要性和益处。通过社区领导人进行非正式死亡通知的本地化做法可以纳入正式报告系统,以捕捉可能被遗漏的基于社区的死亡。