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v2.1.5153.produseast1
Journal Article
|Commentary

Should mortality data for the elderly be collected routinely in emergencies? The practical challenges of age-disaggregated surveillance systems

du Cros PAK, Venis S, Karunakara U
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Abstract
Data on the elderly are rarely collected in humanitarian emergencies. During a refugee crisis in South Sudan, Médecins Sans Frontières developed a prospective mortality surveillance system collecting data for those aged ≥50 years and found that the elderly were dying at five times the rate of those aged 5-49 years. Practical and ethical issues arose. Were reported ages accurate? Since no baseline exists, what does the mortality rate mean? Should programmatic changes be made without evidence that these would reduce the elderly mortality rate? We outline issues to be addressed to enable informed decisions on response to elderly populations in emergency settings.

Countries

South Sudan

Subject Area

disease surveillancedata collectionmortalityelderly populations

Languages

English
DOI
10.1093/trstmh/trt085
Published Date
10 Oct 2013
PubMed ID
24114674
Journal
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 107, Issue 11, Pages 669-671
Issue Date
2013-10-10
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Should mortality data for the elderly be collected routinely in emergencies? The practical challenges of age-disaggregated surveillance systems | Journal Article / Commentary | MSF Science Portal