Women and Birth
Volume 21, Issue 1 , Pages 9-12, March 2008

Comparing two survey methods for estimating maternal and perinatal mortality in rural Cambodia

  • Hoeuy Chandy

      Affiliations

    • Trauma Care Foundation, Battambang, Cambodia
  • ,
  • Yang Van Heng

      Affiliations

    • Trauma Care Foundation, Battambang, Cambodia
  • ,
  • Ha Samol

      Affiliations

    • Trauma Care Foundation, Battambang, Cambodia
  • ,
  • Hans Husum

      Affiliations

    • Tromsoe Mine Victim Resource Center, Institute of Clinical Medicine, Tromso University, Norway
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: TMC, PO Box 80, N-9038 University Hospital Northern Norway, Norway. Tel.: +47 776 26227; fax: +47 776 28073.

Received 1 March 2007; received in revised form 14 October 2007; accepted 31 October 2007.

Summary 

Purpose

We need solid estimates of maternal mortality rates (MMR) to monitor the impact of maternal care programs. Cambodian health authorities and WHO report the MMR in Cambodia at 450 per 100,000 live births. The figure is drawn from surveys where information is obtained by interviewing respondents about the survival of all their adult sisters (sisterhood method). The estimate is statistically imprecise, 95% confidence intervals ranging from 260 to 620/100,000. The MMR estimate is also uncertain due to under-reporting; where 80–90% of women deliver at home maternal fatalities may go undetected especially where mortality is highest, in remote rural areas. The aim of this study was to attain more reliable MMR estimates by using survey methods other than the sisterhood method prior to an intervention targeting obstetric rural emergencies.

Procedures

The study was carried out in rural Northwestern Cambodia where access to health services is poor and poverty, endemic diseases, and land mines are endemic. Two survey methods were applied in two separate sectors: a community-based survey gathering data from public sources and a household survey gathering data direct from primary sources.

Findings

There was no statistically significant difference between the two survey results for maternal deaths, both types of survey reported mortality rates around the public figure. The household survey reported a significantly higher perinatal mortality rate as compared to the community-based survey, 8.6% versus 5.0%. Also the household survey gave qualitative data important for a better understanding of the many problems faced by mothers giving birth in the remote villages. There are detection failures in both surveys; the failure rate may be as high as 30–40%.

Principle conclusion

Both survey methods are inaccurate, therefore inappropriate for evaluation of short-term changes of mortality rates. Surveys based on primary informants yield qualitative information about mothers’ hardships important for the design of future maternal care interventions.

Keywords: Maternal mortality, Perinatal mortality, Survey, Rural, Cambodia

 

PII: S1871-5192(07)00113-8

doi:10.1016/j.wombi.2007.10.003

Women and Birth
Volume 21, Issue 1 , Pages 9-12, March 2008