Quality assessment of facility based medical certification of cause of death in the Department of Pediatrics and Child Health at St. Paul’s Hospital Millennium Medical College, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
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Abstract
Abstract
Background
As one of the vital events of interest death must always be certified by a person
authorized by law to issue a document, stating the causes of death. In order to ensure
the universal application of this principle World Health Organization has
recommended an international form of medical cause of death certification that is
adopted by most countries of the world. A good quality death certificate should fulfill
the criteria put forth including a correct documentation of causes of death, with the
correct sequence and time intervals.
Objective:The purpose of the study was to assess quality of facility based documentation of
death certificate in the Department of Pediatrics and Child Health at St. Paul’s
Hospital Millennium Medical College from January 2022- March 2023.
Methods:Ahospital based cross-sectional study was conducted with retrospective data
collection by reviewing medical death certificates of deceased patients who were
admitted at the Department of Pediatrics and Child health before their death with in
the study period. A structured pretested questionnaire with details of the deceased,
WHOformatted death certificate and Rapid Assessment Tool ware used. Medical
death certificates was reviewed by the primary investigator. Errors ware identified by
the rapid assessment tool and classified as Major and Minor errors. Disparities in the
magnitude of errors as compared to age, sex, duration of stay, time of death;
qualification of certifier and place of death was assessed.
Results:From the 384 medical death certificates that were reviewed, 100% of them had errors.
The commonest major error was a missing time interval. The commonest minor error
was use of abbreviations. compared to daytime death, night time death was 98% less
likely to ill defined UCOD under the adjusted odd‟s ratio. Those who were female
had 82% less likely to have error as compared to male who were certified as dead
Conclusion:As observed by the percentage of medical death certification errors, this study
confirms that there was a high magnitude of error among all of the issued medical
death certificates. There were a collectively similar quantity of poor quality
certificates regardless of the attributes of the deceased, as well as determinant factors
of certifiers. The most common error demonstrated was missing time interval
followed by use of abbreviation and no error on documentation of time of death.
This finding suggests that the time of death may be influence the quality of medical
death certificate, with nighttime death possibly allowing more time for accurate
documentation compared to emergency but need further study. In addition, it had also
picked the magnitude of ill-defined Underlying Cause of Death (4.95%). These are all
crucial inputs into hospital and national data.