Research School of Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
International Health Policy Program, Ministry of Public Health, Nonthaburi, Thailand.
BMJ Glob Health. 2021 Nov;6(11). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-007177.
Cause-specific mortality estimates for 11 countries located in the WHO's South East Asia Region (WHO SEAR) are generated periodically by the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) and the WHO Global Health Estimates (GHE) analyses. A comparison of GBD and GHE estimates for 2019 for 11 specific causes of epidemiological importance to South East Asia was undertaken. An index of relative difference (RD) between the estimated numbers of deaths by sex for each cause from the two sources for each country was calculated, and categorised as marginal (RD=±0%-9%), moderate (RD=±10%-19%), high (RD=±20%-39%) and extreme (RD>±40%). The comparison identified that the RD was >10% in two-thirds of all instances. The RD was 'high' or 'extreme' for deaths from tuberculosis, diarrhoea, road injuries and suicide for most SEAR countries, and for deaths from most of the 11 causes in Bangladesh, DPR Korea, Myanmar, Nepal and Sri Lanka. For all WHO SEAR countries, mortality estimates from both sources are based on statistical models developed from an international historical cause-specific mortality data series that included very limited empirical data from the region. Also, there is no scientific rationale available to justify the reliability of one set of estimates over the other. The characteristics of national mortality statistics systems for each WHO SEAR country were analysed, to understand the reasons for weaknesses in empirical data. The systems analysis identified specific limitations in structure, organisation and implementation that affect data completeness, validity of causes of death and vital statistics production, which vary across countries. Therefore, customised national strategies are required to strengthen mortality statistics systems to meet immediate and long-term data needs for health policy and research, and reduce dependence on current unreliable modelled estimates.
世界卫生组织东南亚区域(世卫组织东南亚区域)的 11 个国家的特定原因死亡率估算值是由全球疾病负担(GBD)和世卫组织全球卫生估计(GHE)分析定期生成的。对 GBD 和 GHE 对东南亚具有流行病学重要性的 11 种特定原因的 2019 年估计值进行了比较。计算了每个国家两种来源的每种死因的男女死亡估计数之间的相对差异(RD)指数,并将其归类为边际(RD=±0%-9%)、中度(RD=±10%-19%)、高度(RD=±20%-39%)和极端(RD>±40%)。比较表明,在所有情况下,有三分之二的 RD 超过 10%。对于大多数东南亚国家,结核病、腹泻、道路伤害和自杀导致的死亡以及孟加拉国、朝鲜民主主义人民共和国、缅甸、尼泊尔和斯里兰卡的大多数死因的 RD 为“高”或“极端”。对于所有世卫组织东南亚区域国家,两种来源的死亡率估计值都是基于从国际历史死因特定死亡率数据系列中开发的统计模型得出的,该数据系列仅包含该区域非常有限的经验数据。此外,没有科学依据可以证明一组估计值比另一组更可靠。分析了每个世卫组织东南亚区域国家的国家死亡率统计系统的特点,以了解经验数据薄弱的原因。系统分析确定了影响数据完整性、死因有效性和生命统计数据编制的结构、组织和实施方面的具体限制,这些限制因国家而异。因此,需要制定有针对性的国家战略,以加强死亡率统计系统,以满足卫生政策和研究的当前和长期数据需求,并减少对当前不可靠模型估计的依赖。