AI Article Synopsis

  • Pneumonia and diarrhea are significant causes of death in children under five, with major estimates differing from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) and the World Health Organization/Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (WHO/CHERG) for the year 2010.
  • *The paper identifies three key reasons for these discrepancies: variations in data sources, data processing methods, and the covariates used for modeling disease burden.
  • *Recommendations include increasing transparency in modeling methods and improving data access, with future efforts like GBD 2.0 planned to use a counterfactual approach for better estimation.*

Article Abstract

Background: Pneumonia and diarrhea are leading causes of death for children under five (U5). It is challenging to estimate the total number of deaths and cause-specific mortality fractions. Two major efforts, one led by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) and the other led by the World Health Organization (WHO)/Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG) created estimates for the burden of disease due to these two syndromes, yet their estimates differed greatly for 2010.

Methods: This paper discusses three main drivers of the differences: data sources, data processing, and covariates used for modelling. The paper discusses differences in the model assumptions for etiology-specific estimates and presents recommendations for improving future models.

Results: IHME's Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2010 study estimated 6.8 million U5 deaths compared to 7.6 million U5 deaths from CHERG. The proportional differences between the pneumonia and diarrhea burden estimates from the two groups are much larger; GBD 2010 estimated 0.847 million and CHERG estimated 1.396 million due to pneumonia. Compared to CHERG, GBD 2010 used broader inclusion criteria for verbal autopsy and vital registration data. GBD 2010 and CHERG used different data processing procedures and therefore attributed the causes of neonatal death differently. The major difference in pneumonia etiologies modeling approach was the inclusion of observational study data; GBD 2010 included observational studies. CHERG relied on vaccine efficacy studies.

Discussion: Greater transparency in modeling methods and more timely access to data sources are needed. In October 2013, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) hosted an expert meeting to examine possible approaches for better estimation. The group recommended examining the impact of data by systematically excluding sources in their models. GBD 2.0 will use a counterfactual approach for estimating mortality from pathogens due to specific etiologies to overcome bias of the methods used in GBD 2010 going forward.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4305232PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-014-0728-4DOI Listing

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