Mortality among twins in Sub-Saharan Africa remains high: One-in-five dies before age five
<h4>Background</h4> <p>Sub-Saharan Africa has the world’s highest under-5 and neonatal mortality rates as well as the highest naturally occurring twin rates. Twin pregnancies carry high risk for children and mothers. Under-5 mortality has declined in Sub-Saharan Africa over the la...
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Format: | Journal article |
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Elsevier
2017
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author | Monden, C Smits, J |
author_facet | Monden, C Smits, J |
author_sort | Monden, C |
collection | OXFORD |
description | <h4>Background</h4> <p>Sub-Saharan Africa has the world’s highest under-5 and neonatal mortality rates as well as the highest naturally occurring twin rates. Twin pregnancies carry high risk for children and mothers. Under-5 mortality has declined in Sub-Saharan Africa over the last decades. It is unknown whether twins have shared in this reduction.</p> <h4>Methods</h4> <p>We pooled 90 Demographic and Health Surveys for 30 Sub-Saharan Africa countries held since 1995. We used information on 1 625 203 singleton and 56 484 twin live-births to compute trends in mortality rates for singletons and twins. We examined whether the twin-singleton rate ratio can be attributed to biological, socioeconomic, care-related factors or birth size. We estimated the mortality burden among sub-Saharan African twins.</p> <h4>Findings</h4> <p>Under-5 mortality among twins has declined from 327·8 per 1000 live births in 1995–2001 to 213·0 in 2009-2014. This decline of 35% was much less steep than the 54% reduction among singletons. Twins account for an increasing share of under-5 deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa: currently almost 11% of under-5 mortality and 15% of neonatal mortality. We estimated that approximately 315 000 twins (uncertainty interval 289 000 – 343 000) die in Sub-Saharan African each year. Excess twin mortality cannot be explained by common risk factors for under-5 mortality, including birth weight. The difference with singletons was especially stark for neonatal mortality (RR 5.0; 95%CI 4.4-5.7). Only half of women pregnant with twins reported receiving medical assistance at birth.</p> <h4>Interpretation</h4> <p>The fate of twins in Sub-Sahara Africa is lagging behind that of singletons. An alarming one-fifth of twins in the region dies before age 5, three times the mortality rate among singletons. Twins account for a substantial and growing share of under-5 and neonatal mortality, but they are largely neglected in the literature. Coordinated action is required to increase the situation of this extremely vulnerable group.</p> |
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format | Journal article |
id | oxford-uuid:66d69355-dfe1-454b-90e2-70c55ad4ce0f |
institution | University of Oxford |
last_indexed | 2024-03-06T23:15:02Z |
publishDate | 2017 |
publisher | Elsevier |
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spelling | oxford-uuid:66d69355-dfe1-454b-90e2-70c55ad4ce0f2022-03-26T18:34:22ZMortality among twins in Sub-Saharan Africa remains high: One-in-five dies before age fiveJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:66d69355-dfe1-454b-90e2-70c55ad4ce0fSymplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2017Monden, CSmits, J <h4>Background</h4> <p>Sub-Saharan Africa has the world’s highest under-5 and neonatal mortality rates as well as the highest naturally occurring twin rates. Twin pregnancies carry high risk for children and mothers. Under-5 mortality has declined in Sub-Saharan Africa over the last decades. It is unknown whether twins have shared in this reduction.</p> <h4>Methods</h4> <p>We pooled 90 Demographic and Health Surveys for 30 Sub-Saharan Africa countries held since 1995. We used information on 1 625 203 singleton and 56 484 twin live-births to compute trends in mortality rates for singletons and twins. We examined whether the twin-singleton rate ratio can be attributed to biological, socioeconomic, care-related factors or birth size. We estimated the mortality burden among sub-Saharan African twins.</p> <h4>Findings</h4> <p>Under-5 mortality among twins has declined from 327·8 per 1000 live births in 1995–2001 to 213·0 in 2009-2014. This decline of 35% was much less steep than the 54% reduction among singletons. Twins account for an increasing share of under-5 deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa: currently almost 11% of under-5 mortality and 15% of neonatal mortality. We estimated that approximately 315 000 twins (uncertainty interval 289 000 – 343 000) die in Sub-Saharan African each year. Excess twin mortality cannot be explained by common risk factors for under-5 mortality, including birth weight. The difference with singletons was especially stark for neonatal mortality (RR 5.0; 95%CI 4.4-5.7). Only half of women pregnant with twins reported receiving medical assistance at birth.</p> <h4>Interpretation</h4> <p>The fate of twins in Sub-Sahara Africa is lagging behind that of singletons. An alarming one-fifth of twins in the region dies before age 5, three times the mortality rate among singletons. Twins account for a substantial and growing share of under-5 and neonatal mortality, but they are largely neglected in the literature. Coordinated action is required to increase the situation of this extremely vulnerable group.</p> |
spellingShingle | Monden, C Smits, J Mortality among twins in Sub-Saharan Africa remains high: One-in-five dies before age five |
title | Mortality among twins in Sub-Saharan Africa remains high: One-in-five dies before age five |
title_full | Mortality among twins in Sub-Saharan Africa remains high: One-in-five dies before age five |
title_fullStr | Mortality among twins in Sub-Saharan Africa remains high: One-in-five dies before age five |
title_full_unstemmed | Mortality among twins in Sub-Saharan Africa remains high: One-in-five dies before age five |
title_short | Mortality among twins in Sub-Saharan Africa remains high: One-in-five dies before age five |
title_sort | mortality among twins in sub saharan africa remains high one in five dies before age five |
work_keys_str_mv | AT mondenc mortalityamongtwinsinsubsaharanafricaremainshighoneinfivediesbeforeagefive AT smitsj mortalityamongtwinsinsubsaharanafricaremainshighoneinfivediesbeforeagefive |