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    Modeling severity of tuberculosis as a multiple cause of death in South Africa

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    Forcheh _JTR_2014.pdf (346.6Kb)
    Date
    2014
    Author
    Forcheh, Ntonghanwah
    Setlhare, Keamogetse
    Amey, Alphonse K.A.
    Publisher
    Scientific Research, www.scirp.org/
    Link
    https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/b887/768e2a5d140e90861811375b6f87b7d7b8fc.pdf
    Type
    Published Article
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    Abstract
    The multiple cause of death (MCOD) analysis is used to account for the full contribution of TB as acause of death to South African mortality in 2008 that were coded using ICD10. Following a review of MCOD methods, a sufficient set of variables for use in MCOD and a new method of quantifying the severity of each cause of death are proposed. The results show that a total of 86,818 (14.3% ofall deaths) were TB related, and within all deaths due to natural underlying causes, 86,373 (16.1%)were TB related. Furthermore, 42,581 (7.9%) were due to TB only, 6.0% had TB as an underlying cause along with other contributory causes and 2.0% had TB as a contributory cause. TB was mentioned as the underlying cause of death in 74,863 certificates or 13.9% of deaths due to naturalunderlying causes. Further analysis using multinomial baseline logit models, reveals that the relative odds of death in any demographic group compared with death in the baseline categories depend on the severity level of TB considered. It is proposed that the severity measure should be adopted when studying the contribution of all main causes of death to total mortality.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10311/1887
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    • Research articles (Dept of Statistics) [22]

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