32 research outputs found
Five main causes of death by age group and time period, based on 6,153 deaths in Agincourt HDSS occurring between 1992 and 2005, using cause of death as interpreted probabilistically by the InterVA 3 model.
<p>*PR are physician-interpreted ranks within each period and age category, as previously published <a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000325#pmed.1000325-Tollman1" target="_blank">[9]</a>.</p><p>NCD, noncommunicable disease.</p
Pulmonary tuberculosis as a possible cause of death among 1,492 elders (65+ years) as interpreted by physician consensus (6.4%) and probabilistic modelling (21.3%), in relation to selected verbal autopsy parameters.
<p>*PPV: positive predictive value of the VA parameter for pulmonary tuberculosis.</p
Verbal autopsy findings for 6,153 deaths in Agincourt HDSS occurring between 1992 and 2005, by likely cause and age–sex group, using cause of death as interpreted probabilistically by the InterVA 3 model.
<p>Cause-specific mortality fractions from physician coding of the same dataset are shown for comparison in the second column.</p><p>*Cause specific mortality fraction, across all ages.</p
Active work, exercise and dietary consumption in survey 1 and 2.
Active work, exercise and dietary consumption in survey 1 and 2.</p
Summary measures of postpartum psychological distress (SRQ-20 score ≥6) in intervention and control areas (with and without tea garden residents), by year.
<p>Summary measures of postpartum psychological distress (SRQ-20 score ≥6) in intervention and control areas (with and without tea garden residents), by year.</p
Multivariable logistic regressions of NCD outcomes and survey exposure, adjusted for socio-demographic factors.
Multivariable logistic regressions of NCD outcomes and survey exposure, adjusted for socio-demographic factors.</p
Definitions for anthropometric measures.
Definitions for anthropometric measures.</p
Sample selection procedure for evaluation of the effect of women’s groups on postpartum psychological distress.
<p>From 25,615 births and deaths (‘events’) over the 24 study months in 2010 and 2011 we excluded data from: 17,181 events that did not occur within the SRQ-20 data collection periods; 62 events where it was not possible to conduct an interview due to migration or refusal; 1945 events associated with mothers who were temporary residents in the study area; nine events associated with a maternal death; 100 events associated with mothers who had previously delivered during the SRQ-20 data collection periods, either because of multiple births or through repeated births; 23 mothers due to missing SRQ-20 data. In total, 6275 mothers were included in the final sample.</p