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Published in: Population Health Metrics 1/2015

Open Access 01-12-2015 | Research

Measuring causes of death in populations: a new metric that corrects cause-specific mortality fractions for chance

Authors: Abraham D. Flaxman, Peter T. Serina, Bernardo Hernandez, Christopher J. L. Murray, Ian Riley, Alan D. Lopez

Published in: Population Health Metrics | Issue 1/2015

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Abstract

Background

Verbal autopsy is gaining increasing acceptance as a method for determining the underlying cause of death when the cause of death given on death certificates is unavailable or unreliable, and there are now a number of alternative approaches for mapping from verbal autopsy interviews to the underlying cause of death. For public health applications, the population-level aggregates of the underlying causes are of primary interest, expressed as the cause-specific mortality fractions (CSMFs) for a mutually exclusive, collectively exhaustive cause list. Until now, CSMF Accuracy is the primary metric that has been used for measuring the quality of CSMF estimation methods. Although it allows for relative comparisons of alternative methods, CSMF Accuracy provides misleading numbers in absolute terms, because even random allocation of underlying causes yields relatively high CSMF accuracy. Therefore, the objective of this study was to develop and test a measure of CSMF that corrects this problem.

Methods

We developed a baseline approach of random allocation and measured its performance analytically and through Monte Carlo simulation. We used this to develop a new metric of population-level estimation accuracy, the Chance Corrected CSMF Accuracy (CCCSMF Accuracy), which has value near zero for random guessing, and negative quality values for estimation methods that are worse than random at the population level.

Results

The CCCSMF Accuracy formula was found to be CCSMF Accuracy = (CSMF Accuracy - 0.632) / (1 - 0.632), which indicates that, at the population-level, some existing and commonly used VA methods perform worse than random guessing.

Conclusions

CCCSMF Accuracy should be used instead of CSMF Accuracy when assessing VA estimation methods because it provides a more easily interpreted measure of the quality of population-level estimates.
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Metadata
Title
Measuring causes of death in populations: a new metric that corrects cause-specific mortality fractions for chance
Authors
Abraham D. Flaxman
Peter T. Serina
Bernardo Hernandez
Christopher J. L. Murray
Ian Riley
Alan D. Lopez
Publication date
01-12-2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Population Health Metrics / Issue 1/2015
Electronic ISSN: 1478-7954
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12963-015-0061-1

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