Original Research
A review of the structure and function of vital registration system in Ghana: Towards improvement in mortality data quality for health policy analysis
Journal of Public Health in Africa | Vol 2, No 1 | a1104 |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4081/jphia.2011.e5
| © 2024 Julius N. Fobil, Eunice Aryee, Francis Bilson, Juergen May, Alexander Kraemer
| This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 28 November 2024 | Published: 01 March 2011
Submitted: 28 November 2024 | Published: 01 March 2011
About the author(s)
Julius N. Fobil, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana, Ghana; and, Bernhard-Notch Institute for Tropical Medicine, Hamburg, Germany; and, School of Public Health, Department of Public Health Medicine, Bielefeld University, GermanyEunice Aryee, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana, Ghana
Francis Bilson, 37 Military Teaching Hospital, Ministry of Defense, Accra, Ghana
Juergen May, Bernhard-Notch Institute for Tropical Medicine, Germany
Alexander Kraemer, School of Public Health, Department of Public Health Medicine, Bielefeld University, Germany
Full Text:
PDF (439KB)Abstract
Vital registration systems (VRS) are important in the collection of routine data on indicators of development. These are particularly useful if they are properly built to address weaknesses in the system leading to poor data quality. For instance, routine data on health events (e.g. morbidity, mortality etc.) are crucial for rapid assessment of disease burden and mortality trends in the population. They are also useful in the identification of vulnerable groups in populations. Despite their usefulness, VRS in many developing countries including Ghana are poorly structured raising questions about the quality of the output data from these systems. The present study aimed at assessing and documenting the structure and function of the VRS in Ghana, as well as at identifying the structural features that potentially compromise the reliability and validity of the output data the system. To perform this study, collection and review of policy and legal documents establishing the VRS, documentation and evaluation of component structures of the system, assessment of procedural protocols guiding data collection processes and in-depth interviews with staff at the Ghana Births and Deaths Registry were performed. The assessment of the structure of the Ghana VRS, policy documents setting it up and the operational procedures reveals important lapses (e.g. presence of outmoded practices, imperfections in Births and Deaths Registry Act, 1965, Act 301 and imperfect system design) in the system that could compromise validity and reliability of the data generated from the registration in Ghana.
Keywords
vital registration system; routine data; reliability; validity; death cause; data quality
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