Effects of the civil war in central Mozambique and evaluation of the intervention of the International Committee of the Red Cross / Michel Garenne, Rudi Coninx and Chantal Dupuy
Effects of the civil war in central Mozambique and evaluation of the intervention of the International Committee of the Red Cross
Author zone:
Michel Garenne, Rudi Coninx and Chantal Dupuy
Host item entries:
Journal of tropical pediatrics, Vol. 43, December 1997, p. 318-323
Languages:
English
Abstract:
In October 1994, a retrospective study of mortality of children was conducted in Maringué, a district of central Mozambique. Estimates based on maternity histories of 1503 women aged 15-60 years revealed complex changes in the under-5 death rate. During the colonial period (1955-1974), mortality declined from 373 to 270 per 1000. During the civil war period (1975-1991), mortality increased rapidly to reach a peak of 473 per 1000 in 1986. It declined again thereafter and reached a plateau of 380 in 1991. A health intervention conductd by the International Red Cross Committee since 1992 further reduced mortality to 269 per 1000 in 1994. Most of the 1992-1994 decline was attributable to vaccinations, in particular measles and tetanus immunizations, and to Vitamin A supplementation.
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