Urban-rural and sex differentials in tuberculosis mortality in Bangladesh: Results from a population-based survey
Date
2022-10-22Publisher
Wiley Online LibraryAuthor
Sarker, MalabikaHomayra, Fahmida
Rawal, Lal B.
Kabir, Razin
Aftab, Afzal
Bari, Rahmatul
Dzokoto, Agnes
Shargie, Estifanos Biru
Islam, Shayla
Islam, Akramul
Latif, A. H. M. Mahbub
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Sarker, M., Homayra, F., Rawal, L. B., Kabir, R., Aftab, A., Bari, R., . . . Mahbub Latif, A. H. M. (2019). Urban-rural and sex differentials in tuberculosis mortality in Bangladesh: Results from a population-based survey. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 24(1), 109-115. doi:10.1111/tmi.13171Abstract
Objective
To assess tuberculosis mortality in Bangladesh through a population-based survey using a Verbal Autopsy tool.
Methods
Nationwide mortality survey employing the WHO-recommended Verbal Autopsy (VA) tool, and using InsilicoVA, a data-driven method, to assign the cause of death. Using a three-stage cluster sampling method, 3997 VA interviews were conducted in both urban and rural areas of Bangladesh. Cause-specific mortality fractions (CSMF) were estimated using Bayesian probabilistic models.
Results
6.8% of total deaths in the population were due to TB [95% CI: (5.1, 8.9)], comprising 12.0% [95% CI: (11.1, 12.8)] and 6.42% [95% CI: (5.4, 7.3)] of total male and female deaths, respectively. This proportion was highest among adults age 15–49 years [12.2%, 95% CI: (9.4, 14.6)]. The urban population is more likely to die from TB, and urban males have highest CSMF [13.6%, 95% CI: (9.1, 16.9)].
Conclusion
Our survey results show that TB is the fifth major cause of death in the general population and that sex and place of residence (urban/rural) have a significant effect on TB mortality in Bangladesh. The underlying causes of higher rates of TB-related deaths in urban areas and particularly among urban males, who have better knowledge and higher enrollment in the DOTS Program, need to be explored.