TY - JOUR AU - Joshi Rohina AU - Serina P. AU - Stewart A. AU - Riley I. AU - Hernandez B. AU - Sanvictores D. AU - Tallo V. AU - Murray C. AU - Flaxman A. AU - Lopez A. AU - Mooney M. AU - Praveen Devarsetty AB -

BACKGROUND: One key contextual feature in Verbal Autopsy (VA) is the time between death and survey administration, or recall period. This study quantified the effect of recall period on VA performance by using a paired dataset in which two VAs were administered for a single decedent. METHODS: This study used information from the Population Health Metrics Research Consortium (PHMRC) Study, which collected VAs for "gold standard" cases where cause of death (COD) was supported by clinical criteria. This study repeated VA interviews within 3-52 months of death in PHMRC study sites in Andhra Pradesh, India, and Bohol and Manila, Philippines. The final dataset included 2113 deaths interviewed twice and with recall periods ranging from 0 to 52 months. COD was assigned by the Tariff method and its accuracy determined by comparison with the gold standard COD. RESULTS: The probability of a correct diagnosis of COD decreased by 0.55 % per month in the period after death. Site of data collection and survey module also affected the probability of Tariff Method correctly assigning a COD. The probability of a correct diagnosis in VAs collected 3-11 months after death will, on average, be 95.9 % of that in VAs collected within 3 months of death. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that collecting VAs within 3 months of death may improve the quality of the information collected, taking the need for a period of mourning into account. This study substantiates the WHO recommendation that it is reasonable to collect VAs up to 1 year after death providing it is accepted that probability of a correct diagnosis is likely to decline month by month during this period.

AD - Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington, 2301 Fifth Ave., Suite 600, Seattle, WA 98121 USA.
University of Queensland, School of Public Health, Level 2 Public Health Building School of Public Health, Herston Road, Herston, QLD 4006 Australia ; University of Melbourne, School of Population and Global Health, Building 379, 207 Bouverie St., Parkville, 3010 VIC Australia.
The George Institute for Global Health - India, Unit No. 301, Second Floor, ANR Center Road No.1, Banjara Hills, Hyderabad, Telangana 500 034 India.
Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, Corporate Ave, Muntinlupa City, 1781 Philippines.
The George Institute for Global Health - Australia, Level 10, King George V Building, 83-117 Missenden Rd, PO Box M201, Camperdown, NSW 2050 Australia.
University of Melbourne, School of Population and Global Health, Building 379, 207 Bouverie St., Parkville, 3010 VIC Australia. AN - 27833459 BT - Popul Health Metr C2 - PMC5101705 CN - [IF]: 3.347 DP - NLM ET - 2016/11/12 J2 - Population health metrics LA - Eng LB - AUS
INDIA
OCS
FY17 M1 - 1 N1 - Serina, Peter
Riley, Ian
Hernandez, Bernardo
Flaxman, Abraham D
Praveen, Devarsetty
Tallo, Veronica
Joshi, Rohina
Sanvictores, Diozele
Stewart, Andrea
Mooney, Meghan D
Murray, Christopher J L
Lopez, Alan D
England
Popul Health Metr. 2016 Oct 18;14:40. eCollection 2016. N2 -

BACKGROUND: One key contextual feature in Verbal Autopsy (VA) is the time between death and survey administration, or recall period. This study quantified the effect of recall period on VA performance by using a paired dataset in which two VAs were administered for a single decedent. METHODS: This study used information from the Population Health Metrics Research Consortium (PHMRC) Study, which collected VAs for "gold standard" cases where cause of death (COD) was supported by clinical criteria. This study repeated VA interviews within 3-52 months of death in PHMRC study sites in Andhra Pradesh, India, and Bohol and Manila, Philippines. The final dataset included 2113 deaths interviewed twice and with recall periods ranging from 0 to 52 months. COD was assigned by the Tariff method and its accuracy determined by comparison with the gold standard COD. RESULTS: The probability of a correct diagnosis of COD decreased by 0.55 % per month in the period after death. Site of data collection and survey module also affected the probability of Tariff Method correctly assigning a COD. The probability of a correct diagnosis in VAs collected 3-11 months after death will, on average, be 95.9 % of that in VAs collected within 3 months of death. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that collecting VAs within 3 months of death may improve the quality of the information collected, taking the need for a period of mourning into account. This study substantiates the WHO recommendation that it is reasonable to collect VAs up to 1 year after death providing it is accepted that probability of a correct diagnosis is likely to decline month by month during this period.

PY - 2016 SN - 1478-7954 (Electronic)
1478-7954 (Linking) EP - 40 ST - Population health metrics T2 - Popul Health Metr TI - What is the optimal recall period for verbal autopsies? Validation study based on repeat interviews in three populations VL - 14 Y2 - FY17 ER -