1 / 26

Key Findings

Key Findings. What is the AMS?. The AMS 2010 is the first comprehensive mortality survey in Afghanistan. It is a nationally representative survey of 22,351 households, 47,848 women age 12-49, and includes verbal autopsies of 3,157 deaths. The survey covered 87% of the country.

mbuskirk
Download Presentation

Key Findings

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Key Findings

  2. What is the AMS? The AMS 2010 is the first comprehensive mortality survey in Afghanistan. It is a nationally representative survey of 22,351 households, 47,848 women age 12-49, and includes verbal autopsies of 3,157 deaths. The survey covered 87% of the country.

  3. AMS 2010 Survey Domains

  4. How is the AMS 2010 different from previous surveys? The AMS 2010 is the first survey to collect data on adult mortality in Afghanistan. The AMS is the first survey to provide nationally representative data on maternal mortality The AMS is the first survey to produce direct estimates of childhood mortality in country The AMS is the first survey to produce cause of death data for all ages

  5. Outline • Household characteristics • Fertility • Marriage • Family Planning • Childhood Mortality • Adult Mortality • Maternal Mortality • Cause of Death

  6. Access to Electricity Percent of households with electricity

  7. Access to Improved Water Source Percent of households

  8. Access to Improved Sanitation Percent of households

  9. Female Respondents with No Education by Age Percentage of women age 12-49 with no education

  10. Total Fertility Rate: How Does Afghanistan Compare? TFR for women age 15-49

  11. Trends in Family Planning Percent of currently married women who are using any modern method Note: MICS 2003 urban and total refers to all methods.

  12. Contraceptive Use: How Does Afghanistan Compare? Percent of currently married women who are using any modern method

  13. Trends in Delivery Care from a Medically Skilled Provider Percent of last live births

  14. Skilled Birth Attendants: How Does Afghanistan Compare? Percent distribution of live births in the past 5 years assisted at delivery by a skilled provider

  15. Childhood Mortality Levels (Afghanistan excluding South zone - Adjusted) Deaths per 1,000 live births for the 2-6 year period before the survey excluding the South zone

  16. How Does Afghanistan Compare?Under-five Mortality Deaths per 1,000 live births for the 5-year period before the survey (Afghanistan excluding the South zone)

  17. Causes of Childhood Deaths Percentage of under-5 deaths in the three years before the survey

  18. Maternal Mortality Ratio327 deaths per 100,000 live births

  19. Pregnancy-related Mortality • 1 in every 50 women in Afghanistan will die from a pregnancy-related cause during her lifetime • In other words, 1 Afghan woman will die about every 2 hours from a pregnancy-related cause

  20. Maternal Mortality Ratio: How does Afghanistan compare? Deaths per 100,000 live births Data source: AMS 2010; Streatfield et al. (2011) for Bangladesh 2010; and DHS Survey reports for Nepal and Pakistan

  21. Causes of Maternal Deaths Percentage of maternal deaths in the three years before the survey

  22. Best Estimate: Life ExpectancyMale: 62 yearsFemale: 62 years

  23. Trends in Adult Mortality by Sex(Sibling History) Female Male Deaths per 1,000 people

  24. Causes of Female and Male Deaths, All Ages Percent distribution of female and male deaths in the three years before the survey

  25. Injury-related Deaths • One in five males die from injury-related causes. Half of these deaths are due to war and violence. • Among men age 15 and over, war and violence account for about half of all injury-related deaths (48%). • War and violence are also a significant cause of death due to injury for boys under age 15 years (10%).

  26. Thank You

More Related