2 research outputs found

    An electronic register for vital registration in a rural village with no electricity in Malawi.

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    SETTING: Chalasa village, Traditional Authority Mtema, Lilongwe District, Malawi. OBJECTIVES: To report on the deployment of an electronic register in a rural village with no electricity. Specific objectives were to document 1) challenges in setting up the electronic village register (EVR); 2) demographics of village residents, along with births and deaths over three quarters; and 3) the costs of setting up the system. DESIGN: A descriptive study. RESULTS: The main challenges were slow adoption of the EVR by the village headman, lack of health passports for village residents, double counting of some residents and difficult connectivity. These challenges were overcome. In terms of data, of 790 village residents, 379 (48%) were male, 417 (53%) were aged <15 years and 29 (3.6%) ⩾65 years. From April to December 2013, there were 18 births and 5 deaths. The cost of the EVR, including maintenance costs for 12 months, was US$6210. CONCLUSION: An EVR was successfully deployed in Chalasa village, rural Malawi, and data on the resident village population, along with quarterly births and deaths, are now available. This is the first step towards a village-level civil registration system in rural Africa

    Scaling up electronic village registers for measuring vital statistics in rural villages in Malawi.

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    Setting: Eighty-three villages without electricity in Mtema Traditional Authority, Lilongwe District, Malawi. Objectives: To describe 1) the expansion of the electronic village register (EVR) to 83 villages in Mtema Traditional Authority, 2) the challenges encountered and changes made to render the system robust and user-friendly, 3) the value propositions developed to increase the system's desirability, and 4) the results of the village register. Design: Descriptive study. Results: After the deployment of the EVR in one village in 2013, the system was extended to 83 villages with modifications to render it more robust and user-friendly. These changes included modifications to the power, connectivity and work stations, better battery security and a single modular electronics panel. Value propositions of the EVR for the village headmen included daily postings of news/sports items and sockets for charging mobile phones and lanterns. Of the 47 559 residents registered, 48% were male, 14% were aged 0-4 years, 43% were aged 15-44 years and 4% were aged ⩾65 years. Between 1 April 2016 and 31 March 2017, 976 births and 177 deaths were recorded. The total equipment cost per village was US$2430. Conclusion: An electronic village birth and death registration system can function in an area with no communication or electricity infrastructure
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