Mortality-related factors disparity among Iranian Deceased Children Aged 1-59 Months According to the Medical Activities in Emergency Units: National Mortality Surveillance System

Roya Kelishadi, Sayyed Hamed Barakati, Hamid Reza Lornejad, Masoud Amiri, Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh

Abstract


  • Background: To determine disparity in mortality-related factors in 1- 59 months children across Iran using hospital records of emergency units.
  • Materials and Methods: After designing and validating a national questionnaire for mortality data collection of children 1-59 months, all 40 medical universities has been asked to fill in the questionnaires and return to the main researcher in the Ministry of Health and Medical Education. Age and sex of deceased children, the type of health center, staying more than 2 h in emergency unit, the reason of prolonged stay in emergency, having emergency (risk) signs, vaccination, need to blood transfusion, need to electroshock and so on have also been collected across the country. There was also a comparison of children based on their BMI. Chi-square test has been applied for nominal and ordinal variables. ANOVA and t-student test have been used for measuring the difference of continuous variables among groups.
  • Results: Mortality in 1-59 months children was unequally distributed across Iran. The average month of entrance to hospital was June, the average day was 16th of month, and the average hour of entrance to hospital was 14:00. The average of month, day and hour for discharge was July, 16, and 14:00, respectively. The hour of discharge was statistically significant between children with and without risk signs. More than half (54%) of patients had referred to educational hospital emergency units. There were no statistically significant differences between children with and without emergency signs. There were statistically significant differences between children with and without emergency signs in age less than 24 months (0.034), nutrition situation (P=0.031), recommendation for referring (P=0.013), access to electroshock facilities (P=0.026), and having successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation (P=0.01).
  • Conclusions: This study is one of the first to show the distribution of the disparity of early childhood mortality-related factors within a developing country. Our results suggest that disparity in 1-59 months mortality based on hospital records in emergency units needs more attention by policy-makers. It is advisable to conduct provincially representative surveys to provide recent estimates of hospital access disparities in emergency units and to allow monitoring over time.
  • Key words: National mortality registration system, children mortality, emergency units, Iran

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