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Comparative Study
. 1980 Sep;70(9):977-82.
doi: 10.2105/ajph.70.9.977.

The underregistration of neonatal deaths: Georgia 1974--77

Comparative Study

The underregistration of neonatal deaths: Georgia 1974--77

B J McCarthy et al. Am J Public Health. 1980 Sep.

Abstract

We reviewed the neonatal outcome of 3,369 infants who weighed less than or equal to 1500 grams and who were born in Georgia during the years 1974--76. We matched 1,465 of these infants with a death certificate registered in the State's Vital Records. Upon review of the hospital records of the remaining infants, we identified 453 infants that died during the neonatal period without a death certificate being registered. Subsequently, we compared the hospital death registries for 1977 in Georgia and death certificates registered in Vital Records during 1977. We identified an additional 236 infants who died without a death certificate being registered. Forty per cent of these infants weighed greater than 1500 grams. Two major procedural errors regarding the filing of death certificates in Georgia at the local level contributed to this 21 per cent underregistratioon of neonatal deaths in 1974--77. The underregistration occurred disproportionately for rural areas, for unmarried mothers, and for Black infants. The reason for underregistration included failure of hospitals and morticians to file death certificates with the county registrars.

PIP: The authors investigate neonatal mortality rates in Georgia between 1974 and 1977. The suspected under-registration of neonatal deaths is analyzed with respect to errors in the processing of birth and/or death certificates and the failure to register some infant deaths. The relationship of under-registration to factors such as birth weight, urban or rural residence, age and marital status of mother, and race is examined. The problem of under-registration in other states is discussed

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References

    1. Public Health Rep. 1961 Aug;76:717-24 - PubMed

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