Table 1.
Variables used for the analysis by information source.
Figure 1.
Trends in HSU-recorded hospital admissions and deaths in adults 15–64 years, 1990–2009.
(A) Hospital admissions and deaths by sex; (B) Hospital deaths/1000 admissions (C) Age-specific hospital admissions, males; (D) Age-specific hospital admissions, females; (E & F) Age-specific hospital deaths, males and females; (G & H) Age- specific hospital case fatality rates, males and females.
Figure 2.
Mid-Night Census data from primary and general service category hospitals and referral hospitals (Princess Marina in Gaborone, and Nyangabwe in Francistown), 1990–2011.
(A) All cause inpatient admissions excluding neonates; (B) Inpatient deaths; (C) Inpatient mortality ratio (deaths per 100 admissions).
Figure 3.
Death rates per 100,000 population* in adults, by sex and setting and male to female rate ratios, Registry of Births and Deaths (RBD), 2003–2010.
(A) RBD total, RBD excluding injuries and external causes, institutional, and non-institutional setting, by sex, for ages 15–64; (B) RBD death rates by age and sex; (C) Ratio of male death rates to female death rates ages 15–34 and 35–64.
Figure 4.
Trends in deaths, ART coverage rates and HIV prevalence among pregnant women.
(A) Deaths reported from Health Statistics (HSU; institutional natural-cause deaths only), Hospital Midnight Census (MNC), and Registry of Births and Deaths (RBD; institutional and non-institutional, including non-natural causes) and estimated ART treatment coverage rates of persons ≥15 years with CD4 cells <200/µL and <350/µL, 1990–2011; (B) HIV prevalence by age group among pregnant women from the antenatal sentinel surveillance system, 1992–2011. Dashed lines represent best fitting quadratic (left) and linear (right) curves.
Figure 5.
Comparison of trends in all-cause death rates per 100,000 population in ages 15–64 by sex and total, between Spectrum epidemiological projection model, WHO life-tables, and empirical surveillance data (RBD+HSU combined) with and without adjustments for estimated reporting completeness.