Lerer L B
Department of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, Medical School, University of Cape Town Observatory, South Africa.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 1993 Jun;47(3):248-50. doi: 10.1136/jech.47.3.248.
The study aimed to improve mortality data by finding ways of reducing the large number of deaths certified as being from "ill-defined" causes (ICD 780-798) in South Africa. This problem is attributable to the absence of cause of death information in many cases where the police issue the death certificate.
A total of 600 consecutive death certification records at the Salt River State Mortuary, Cape Town were reviewed.
Altogether 347 (58%) deaths were from unnatural causes, 111 (18%) were certified by a doctor, 83 (14%) were certified as being the result of natural causes after a necropsy, and 59 (10%) were certified by the police as being from natural causes. Analysis of sworn statements obtained from the next of kin of all those certified dead by the police rather than a doctor provided a clear cause of death in 72.9%, and a history of recent contact with health services (less than one week previously) in 47.5%. All infants certified dead by the police had a history consistent with diarrhoeal disease.
The method of death certification may be an indicator of access to health care and reviewing sworn statements to determine the cause of death should improve the quality of mortality data in the developing world.
该研究旨在通过寻找减少南非大量被认证为“死因不明”(国际疾病分类780 - 798)死亡人数的方法,来改善死亡率数据。这个问题归因于在许多警察签发死亡证明的案例中缺乏死因信息。
对开普敦盐河州立太平间连续600份死亡证明记录进行了审查。
总共347例(58%)死亡是非自然原因导致的,111例(18%)由医生认证,83例(14%)在尸检后被认证为自然原因导致的死亡,59例(10%)由警方认证为自然原因导致的死亡。对所有由警方而非医生认证死亡者的近亲提供的宣誓陈述进行分析,72.9%的陈述提供了明确的死因,47.5%的陈述显示死者近期(不到一周前)有与医疗服务机构接触的记录。所有由警方认证死亡的婴儿都有与腹泻病相符的病史。
死亡认证方法可能是获得医疗保健的一个指标,审查宣誓陈述以确定死因应能提高发展中国家死亡率数据的质量。