The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Verbal autopsies

Method being used in push to better track global deaths

- By Christina Larson and Mike Stobbe

KIGALI, RWANDA >> One afternoon last month, a young woman with a tablet computer sat next to Alphonsine Umurerwa on the living room couch, asking questions, listening carefully.

She learned that the woman’s 23-year-old daughter, Sandrine Umwungeri, had been very sick for about a year, gradually becoming so weak she stopped leaving their tin-roofed home in a hilly section of Rwanda’s capital city. The family thought she had malaria.

Medicines from a local pharmacy didn’t help. In March, she died.

The interviewe­r asked: When did Sandrine begin to feel weak? Did she have a fever? Did her skin take on a yellow hue? Each typed answer determined the next question to pose, like following a phone tree.

This was a “verbal autopsy” — an interview in which a trained health worker asks a close relative or caretaker about a recently deceased person. Increasing­ly, health officials are using these tools and their computer algorithms to learn more about the global course of human disease.

About 50 countries have attempted verbal autopsy projects, and the list is growing. On Tuesday, Bloomberg Philanthro­pies — a major funder of internatio­nal health data initiative­s — announced it will devote another $120 million over the next four years to continue projects in 20 previously funded countries, and add five more.

That includes money for verbal autopsies, as well as cancer registries and other programs intended to help developing countries gather accurate data about the health of their citizens.

“With more and better data on causes of death, more countries can save more lives,” said Michael Bloomberg, the philanthro­py’s founder, in a statement.

The work is badly needed, experts say.

An estimated 60 million people in the world will die this year, and half will have no death certificat­es or other records describing what killed them. Most will be in low- and middleinco­me countries, particular­ly in Africa and parts of Asia.

That means the common understand­ing of overall disease and mortality trends in the developing world often relies upon broad estimates and guesswork. So do the decisions many countries make about which health problems to prioritize.

“The scale of the problem is really quite staggering,” said Lucia D’Ambruoso, a University of Aberdeen researcher who has studied verbal autopsies. “There’s a moral imperative, as well as analytical one, to be able to shine a light on those otherwise invisible deaths.”

To be sure, knowing what’s killing people can be tricky even in developed countries.

For example, though the United States requires doctors to sign death certificat­es, recent studies suggest some doctors put down certain conditions as a default, which is one reason why some experts believe heart disease has been overreport­ed as a cause of death in the U.S.

But it’s far more problemati­c to collect accurate data in countries where only a fraction of deaths occur in hospitals, or with doctors present.

In Rwanda, only an estimated 20% of deaths occur in hospitals, and there is just one licensed doctor for every 8,000 people, according to data from the Rwanda Medical and Dental Council.

The current verbal autopsy campaign was pioneered more than 50 years ago, in small physician-led research projects in Africa and Asia.

One milestone study was conducted in India. In the late 1990s, trained interviewe­rs — not doctors — went into the homes of people who had recently died. They asked close relatives about the symptoms and events that preceded a loved one’s death. Small teams of physicians later used the interviews to determine the cause of death.

The Million Death Study, as it was called, suggested that India had far more malaria and smoking-related deaths than the World Health Organizati­on had estimated, but far fewer HIV deaths than WHO expected.

Clearly, verbal autopsies have drawbacks. They rely on grief-stricken people to clearly recall clinical details. And the validity of results may vary depending on who’s answering the questions, what questions are asked, and how responses are interprete­d.

Some health advocates — including the philanthro­pists Bill and Melinda Gates — have pushed for other methods like minimally invasive tissue sampling, a technique in which fine needles are inserted into a dead person’s body, gathering samples from different organs for rapid analysis.

But such sampling has limitation­s, too. It requires specially trained technician­s, and samples have to be taken and shipped for analysis within 24 hours after a person’s death.

Verbal autopsies “are

much better to do that than do nothing, which is the only alternativ­e” in some countries, said Peter Byass, a researcher at Sweden’s Umea University and an expert on the interviews.

The New York-based organizati­on Vital Strategies began working with the Rwandan government in 2015 to develop a verbal autopsy program, using Bloomberg and other funding. The project trained government health workers — who already provide health and hospice care in homes — to conduct the interviews.

About 2,700 verbal autopsies have been done in nine small pockets of the country. That’s not enough to provide a good look at national death trends, but the government is planning to scale up the work in coming years to achieve a nationally representa­tive sample.

At first, neighbors sometimes perceived the questions as intrusive. But over time, most people have come to accept them. “When we explain to them why we do this, in the end they will understand and answer our questions,” said Janvier Ngabonziza, who conducts the interviews in a rural area called Rwamagana.

The verbal autopsy of Sandrine Umwungeri was conducted by Leonie Mfitumukiz­a, who had met her mother through her job as a community health worker. After allowing several months for the family to rest and grieve, she had come to ask about Umwungeri’s illness.

Respectful­ly, and pausing often to offer comfort and consolatio­n, Mfitumukiz­a followed the standardiz­ed set of questions about her symptoms. The informatio­n she gathered will be run through a computer algorithm to assign a cause of death.

The solemnity was broken when a family friend walked into the home carrying a giggling 2-year-old girl. It was Blessing, Umwungeri’s daughter, now being raised by her grandmothe­r.

Afterward, Mfitumukiz­a said she believes Umwungeri died of diabetes, not malaria. But she noted her job that day was to gather informatio­n, not to draw any conclusion.

Verbal autopsies “are much better to do that than do nothing, which is the only alternativ­e” in some countries, said Peter Byass, a researcher at Sweden’s Umea University and an expert on the interviews.

 ?? FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Emmanuel Bizimana holds 2-year-old Blessing, whose mother, Sandrine Umwungeri, passed away recently, as a health worker conducts a “verbal autopsy” in Kigali, Rwanda.
FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Emmanuel Bizimana holds 2-year-old Blessing, whose mother, Sandrine Umwungeri, passed away recently, as a health worker conducts a “verbal autopsy” in Kigali, Rwanda.
 ?? FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People stand outside a house at dusk in Kigali, Rwanda. An estimated 60million people in the world will die this year, and half will lack death certificat­es — and so have no recorded cause of death. Most will be in low- and middle-income countries, particular­ly in Africa and parts of Asia.
FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People stand outside a house at dusk in Kigali, Rwanda. An estimated 60million people in the world will die this year, and half will lack death certificat­es — and so have no recorded cause of death. Most will be in low- and middle-income countries, particular­ly in Africa and parts of Asia.
 ?? FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Alphonsine Umurerwa, reflects after talking about her late daughter Sandrine Umwungeri during a “verbal autopsy” in her home in Kigali, Rwanda. The verbal autopsies now being done in Rwanda rely upon tools developed by Bloomberg Data for Health and approved by the WHO. The same toolset is also being deployed in pilot programs in Tanzania, Zambia, Myanmar, Bangladesh, and a handful of other locations.
FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Alphonsine Umurerwa, reflects after talking about her late daughter Sandrine Umwungeri during a “verbal autopsy” in her home in Kigali, Rwanda. The verbal autopsies now being done in Rwanda rely upon tools developed by Bloomberg Data for Health and approved by the WHO. The same toolset is also being deployed in pilot programs in Tanzania, Zambia, Myanmar, Bangladesh, and a handful of other locations.

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