Background

Mortality in tropical countries varies considerably from season to season. As many of these countries have seen mortality moving from child to old-age mortality, we have studied seasonal variation in child and old-age mortality in a rural area in Ghana that currently undergoes an epidemiologic transition.

Methods

In an annual survey from 2002 through to 2011, we followed 29 642 individuals and obtained the cause and month of death from 1406 deceased individuals by making use of verbal autopsies.

Results

When comparing the seasons, we observed a trend for higher mortality during the wet season. When comparing separate months, we observed 34% more deaths than expected in September (95% CI 1.04-1.69; p = 0.024) at the end of the wet season and 43% more deaths in April (95% CI 1.13-1.80; p = 0.004) at the end of the dry season, while there were 42% less deaths than expected in December (95% CI 0.52-0.70; p = 0.003), shortly after the wet season. Cause-specific analysis indicated that the peak at the end of the wet season was due to excess mortality from infectious diseases in children and older people alike, whereas the peak in old-age mortality at the end of the dry season was due to non-infectious causes in older people only.

Conclusions

Taken together, our data suggest that during the epidemiologic transition, mortality not only shifts from child to old-age and from infectious to non-infectious, but also from the wet to the dry season.

Overview publication

TitleSeasonal variation in child and old-age mortality in rural Ghana.
DateMarch 1st, 2014
Issue nameTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Issue numberv108.3:147-53
DOI10.1093/trstmh/tru007
PubMed24473476
AuthorsEngelaer FM, van Bodegom D, Mangione JN, Eriksson UK & Westendorp RG
KeywordsEpidemiologic transition, Mortality, Old-age, Seasonal variation, Tropical countries
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