학술논문

How useful are registered birth statistics for health and social policy? A global systematic assessment of the availability and quality of birth registration data
Document Type
Report
Source
Population Health Metrics. December 27, 2018, Vol. 16 Issue 1
Subject
Economic aspects
Usage
International aspects
CD-ROM catalog
Database
CD-ROM database
Social policy -- Economic aspects -- International aspects
Databases -- Usage -- International aspects
Birth certificates -- Usage -- International aspects
Public health records -- Usage -- International aspects
Language
English
ISSN
1478-7954
Abstract
Author(s): David E. Phillips[sup.1] , Tim Adair[sup.2] and Alan D. Lopez[sup.2] Background The registration and certification of births, while a near-universal practice in some parts of the world, is far [...]
Background The registration and certification of births has a wide array of individual and societal benefits. While near-universal in some parts of the world, birth registration is less common in many low- and middle-income countries, and the quality of vital statistics vary. We assembled publicly available birth registration records for as many countries as possible into a novel global birth registration database, and we present a systematic assessment of available data. Methods We obtained 4918 country-years of data from 145 countries covering the period 1948-2015. We compared these to existing estimates of total births to assess completeness of public data and adapted existing methods to evaluate the quality and timeliness of the data. Results Since 1980, approximately one billion births were registered and shared in public databases. Compared to estimates of fertility, this represents only 40.0% of total births in the peak year, 2011. Approximately 74 million births (53.1%) per year occur in countries whose systems do not systematically register them and release the aggregate records. Considering data quality, timeliness, and completeness in country-years where data are available, only about 12 million births per year (8.6%) occur in countries with high-performing registration systems. Conclusions This analysis highlights the gaps in available data. Our objective and low-cost approach to assessing the performance of birth registration systems can be helpful to monitor country progress, and to help national and international policymakers set targets for strengthening birth registration systems. Keywords: Civil registration, Vital statistics, Birth certificates, Data quality