1: Public Health. 2002 May;116(3):145-50
The role of demographic
surveillance systems (DSS) in assessing the health of communities: an example
from rural Ethiopia.
Byass P, Berhane Y, Emmelin A, Kebede D, Andersson T, Hogberg U, Wall S.
Epidemiology, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umea
University, Sweden. peterbyass@aol.com
Longitudinal demographic surveillance systems (DSSs) in selected populations can
provide important information in situations where routine health information is
incomplete or absent, particularly in developing countries. The Butajira Rural
Health Project is one such example, initiated in rural Ethiopia in 1987. DSSs
rely on regular community-based surveillance as a means of vital event
registration, among a sufficient population base to draw meaningful conclusions
about rates and trends in relatively rare events such as maternal death.
Enquiries into specific health problems can also then use this framework to
quantify particular issues or evaluate interventions. Demographic
characteristics and trends for a rural Ethiopian population over a 10-y period
are presented as an illustration of the DSS approach, based on 336 000
person-years observed. Overall life expectancy at birth was 50 y. Demographic
parameters generally showed modest trends towards improvement over the 10-y
period.The DSS approach is useful in characterising populations at the community
level over a period of time, providing important information for health planning
and intervention. Methodological issues underlying this approach need further
exploration and development.
PMID: 12082596