Maternal HIV status associated with under-five mortality in rural Northern Malawi: a prospective cohort study

Type Journal Article - Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (1999)
Title Maternal HIV status associated with under-five mortality in rural Northern Malawi: a prospective cohort study
Author(s)
Volume 68
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 81-90
URL https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4338582/
Abstract
Background

Under-five mortality is decreasing but with little change in neonatal mortality rates. We examined the effect of maternal HIV-status on under-five mortality and cause of death since widespread availability of antiretroviral therapy in rural Malawi.

Methods

Children born in 2006-2011 in the Karonga demographic surveillance area were included. Maternal HIV-status was available from HIV sero-surveys. Age-specific mortality rate ratios for children born to HIV-positive and HIV-negative mothers were obtained by fitting a Poisson model accounting for child clustering by mother and adjusting for potential confounders. Cause of death was ascertained by verbal autopsy.

Findings

There were 352 deaths among 6913 under-five singleton children followed for 20,754 person-years (py), giving a mortality rate of 17.0‘/1000py overall, 218/1000py (16.5/1000 live births) in neonates, 20/1000py (17.4/1000 live births) in post-neonatal infants and 8/1000py in 1-4 year-olds. Comparing those born to HIV-positive and HIV-negative mothers, the rate ratio, adjusted for child age, sex, maternal age, parity and drinking water source was 1.5 (95%CI 0.6-3.7) in neonates, 11.5 (95%CI 7.2-18.5) in post-neonatal infants and 4.6 (95%CI 2.7-7.9) in 1-4 year-olds. Birth injury/asphyxia, neonatal sepsis and prematurity contributed >70% of neonatal deaths, while acute infections, malaria, diarrhoea and pneumonia accounted for most deaths in older children.

Conclusions

Maternal HIV status had little effect on neonatal mortality but was associated with much higher mortality in the post-neonatal period and among older children. Greater attention to HIV care in pregnant women and mothers should help improve child survival but broader interventions are needed to reduce neonatal mortality.

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