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http://hdl.handle.net/10628/281
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| Title: | Age-specific mortality patterns in Central Mozambique during and after the end of the Civil War. |
| Authors: | Noden, Bruce H. Pearson, John R.C. Gomes, Aurelio |
| Keywords: | post-conflict - epidemology of HIV/AIDS. Post-conflict - infectious deseases - Mozambique. Civil war - Mortality rate. Civil war - Infectious diseases. |
| Issue Date: | 2011 |
| Publisher: | BioMed Central |
| Citation: | Noden, B.H., Pearson, J.R.C., & Gomes, A. (2011). Age-specific mortality patterns in Central Mozambique during and after the end of the Civil War. Conflict and Health, 5 (8). Retrieved from http://www.conflictandhealth.com/content/5/1/8 |
| Abstract: | Background: In recent years, vigorous debate has developed concerning how conflicts contribute to the spread of infectious diseases, and in particular, the role of post-conflict situations in the epidemiology of HIV/AIDS. This study details the age-specific mortality patterns among the population in the central provincial capital of Beira, Mozambique, during and after the Mozambican civil war which ended in 1992.
Methods: Data was collected from the death register at Beira’s Central Hospital between 1985 and 2003 and descriptively analyzed.
Results: The data show two distinct periods: before and after the peace agreements in 1992. Before 1992 (during the civil war), the main impact of mortality was on children below 5 years of age, including still births, accounting for 58% of all deaths. After the war ended in 1992, the pattern shifted dramatically and rapidly to the 15-49 year old age group which accounted for 49% of all deaths by 2003.
Conclusions: As under-5 mortality rates were decreasing at the end of the conflict, rates for 24-49 year old adults began to dramatically increase due to AIDS. This study demonstrates that strategies can be implemented during conflicts to decrease mortality rates in one vulnerable population but post-conflict dynamics can bring together
other factors which contribute to the rapid spread of other infectious diseases in other vulnerable populations. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10628/281 |
| Appears in Collections: | Biomedical Sciences
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