Masquelier Bruno, Reniers Georges, Pison Gilles
a Université Catholique de Louvain.
Popul Stud (Camb). 2014;68(2):161-77. doi: 10.1080/00324728.2013.856458. Epub 2013 Dec 4.
This paper provides an overview of trends in mortality in children aged under 5 and adults between the ages of 15 and 60 in sub-Saharan Africa, using data on the survival of the children and siblings collected in Demographic and Health Surveys. If conspicuous stalls in the 1990s are disregarded, child mortality levels have generally declined and converged over the last 30-40 years. In contrast, adult mortality in many East and Southern African countries has increased markedly, echoing earlier increases in the incidence of HIV. In recent years, adult mortality levels have begun to decline once again in East Africa, in some instances before the large-scale expansion of antiretroviral therapy programmes. More surprising is the lack of sustained improvements in adult survival in some countries that have not experienced severe HIV epidemics. Because trends in child and adult mortality do not always evolve in tandem, we argue that model-based estimates, inferred by matching indices of child survival onto standard mortality schedules, can be very misleading.
本文利用人口与健康调查收集的儿童及其兄弟姐妹的生存数据,概述了撒哈拉以南非洲5岁以下儿童和15至60岁成年人的死亡率趋势。如果忽略20世纪90年代明显的停滞情况,儿童死亡率在过去30至40年总体上呈下降和趋同态势。相比之下,许多东非和南非国家的成人死亡率显著上升,这与早期艾滋病毒发病率上升相呼应。近年来,东非的成人死亡率再次开始下降,在某些情况下是在抗逆转录病毒治疗方案大规模推广之前。更令人惊讶的是,一些未经历严重艾滋病毒流行的国家在成人存活率方面缺乏持续改善。由于儿童和成人死亡率趋势并不总是同步变化,我们认为,通过将儿童生存指数与标准死亡率表相匹配推断出的基于模型的估计可能会产生很大误导。