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© 1993 Oxford University Press
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Maternal Recall of Symptoms Associated with childhood Deaths in Rural East Africa




* Kenyan Medical Research Institute Coastal Unit PO Box 230. Kilifi, Kenya
** University of Oxford, Nuffield Deparment of Clinical Medicine, John Raddiffe Hospital Headington, Oxford OX3 9DU, UK
Ifakara Centre, an affiliate of National Institute of Medical Research PO Box 53, Ifakara, Tanzania
St. Francis Hospital PO Box 78, Ifakara, Tanzania
Verbal autopsies (VA) are frequently used to determine causas of death for individuals for whom there is no reliable clinical information regarding the terminal illness. VA interviews are used to note key symptoms and signs recalled by relatives of the deceased and diagnoses ascribed according to the symptom complexes. The VA technique assumes that individual disease entities have discrete symptom complexes and that these can be accurately recognized and recalled by the interewees. We have examined the accuracy with which specific symptoms are recalled over time by mothers or normal guardians of 491 children who died on the paediatric wards of two district hospitals in East Africa. Kwashiorkor, measles, trauma, generalized convulsions and neonatal tetanus were all reported with a high degree of accuracy for children who died of these conditions and had low false positive rates for children without these conditions. Recall was similar within 1 month of death compared to recall after 6 months for most symptoms and signs except neonatal tetanus where false positive reports by mothers increaaed with time since death. Symptoms and signs commonly used to describe malaria, respiratory tract and diarrhoea-related deaths were reported by mothers to have been present during the terminal illnes in 43% of cases where these features were absent. Recall abilities differed between the two communities studied for some symptoms and signs highlighting the importance of such studies in every setting where VA are applied.
Revised 1 January 1993
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