1: AIDS. 2004 Mar 5;18(4):663-71.
Levels and causes of
adult mortality in rural South Africa: the impact of AIDS.
Hosegood V, Vanneste AM, Timaeus IM.
Africa Centre for Health and Population Studies, Mtubatuba, South Africa.
vicky.hosegood@lshtm.ac.uk
OBJECTIVE: To quantify the contribution that AIDS makes to adult mortality in
rural South Africa. DESIGN: Demographic surveillance of the population in a
rural area of northern KwaZulu Natal province. METHODS: The population and all
adult deaths (n = 1021) in 2000 were enumerated. We conducted verbal autopsy
interviews with the caregivers of those who died to identify the causes of adult
deaths. A validation study of the verbal autopsy diagnoses was conducted on 109
individuals with hospital notes that could be located. Death rates and other
mortality indices are both calculated directly and estimated indirectly by the
orphanhood method. RESULTS: Mortality in the study area rose sharply in the
late-1990s. By 2000 the probability of dying between ages 15 and 60 was 58% for
women and 75% for men. AIDS, with or without tuberculosis, is the leading cause
of death in adulthood (48%). Injuries, mostly resulting from road traffic
accidents or violence, cause 20% of deaths of men aged 15-44 years. In the age
group 60 years or more, non-communicable diseases account for 76 and 71% of
deaths of women and men respectively. CONCLUSIONS: This population has
experienced a sudden and massive rise in adult mortality. This can be accounted
for by AIDS deaths. Mortality from non-communicable disease and (among men)
injuries is also high. Antenatal HIV seroprevalence continued to rise in rural
KwaZulu Natal in the late 1990s, reaching 40% in some clinics in this area.
Adult mortality will continue to rise unless effective treatment interventions
are introduced.
PMID: 15090772