The epidemiological transition in Antananarivo, Madagascar: an assessment based on death registers (1900–2012)

Masquelier, Bruno;Waltisperger, Dominique;Ralijaona, Osée;Pison, Gilles;Ravélo, Arsène
(2014) Global Health Action. Supplement — Vol. 7, n° 23237, p. 1-12 (2014)

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  • Waltisperger, Dominique
    Author
  • Ralijaona, Osée
    Author
  • Pison, Gilles
    Author
  • Ravélo, Arsène
    Author
Abstract
Background: Madagascar today has one the highest life expectancies in Sub-Saharan Africa despite being amongst the poorest countries in the continent. There are relatively few detailed accounts of the epidemiological transition in this country because of the lack of a comprehensive death registration system at the national level. However, in Madagascar’s capital city, death registration was established around the start of the twentieth century, and is now considered virtually complete. Objective: We provide an overview of trends in all-cause and cause-specific mortality in Antananarivo to document the timing and pace of mortality decline and the changes in the cause-of-death structure. Design: Death registers covering the period 1976 to 2012 were digitized and the population at risk of dying was estimated from available censuses and surveys. Trends for period 1900 to 1976 were partly reconstructed from published sources. Results: The crude death rate stagnated around 30‰until the 1940s in Antananarivo. Mortality declined rapidly after the Second World War then resurged again in the 1980s as a result of the re-emergence of malaria and the collapse of Madagascar’s economy. Over the last 30 years, impressive gains in life expectancy have been registered thanks to the unabated decline in child mortality, despite political instability, a lasting economic crisis and persistent high rates of chronic malnutrition. Progress in adult survival has been more modest because reductions in infectious diseases and diseases of the respiratory system have been partly offset by increases in cardiovascular diseases, neoplasms and other diseases, particularly at ages 50 and over. Conclusions: The transition in Antananarivo has been protracted and largely dependent on anti-microbial medicine. The capital city now faces a double burden of communicable and non-communicable diseases. The ongoing registration of deaths in the capital generates a unique database to evaluate the performance of the health system and measure intervention impacts.
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Masquelier, B., Waltisperger, D., Ralijaona, O., Pison, G., & Ravélo, A. (2014). The epidemiological transition in Antananarivo, Madagascar: an assessment based on death registers (1900–2012). Global Health Action. Supplement, 7(23237), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.3402/gha.v7.23237 (Original work published 2014)