Profile: Health and Demographic Surveillance System in peri-urban areas of Karachi, Pakistan

The Aga Khan University’s Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) in peri urban areas of Karachi was set up in the year 2003 in four low socioeconomic communities and covers an area of 17.6 square kilometres. Its main purpose has been to provide a platform for research projects with the focus on maternal and child health improvement, as well as educational opportunities for trainees. The total population currently under surveillance is 249,128, for which a record of births, deaths, pregnancies and migration events is maintained by two monthly household visits. Verbal autopsies for stillbirths, deaths of children under the age of five years and adult female deaths are conducted. For over a decade, the HDSS has been a platform for a variety of studies  including, calculation of the incidence of various infectious diseases like typhoid bacteremia, pneumonia and diarrhea, evaluation of effectiveness of various treatment regimens for neonatal sepsis, assessment of the acceptance of hospitalized care, determination of the etiology of moderate to severe diarrhea, assessment of burden and etiology of neonatal sepsis and a multi-centre cohort study measuring the burden of stillbirths, neonatal and maternal deaths. We have also established a bio-repository of a well-defined maternal and newborn cohort. Through a well-established HDSS rooted in maternal and child health we aim to provide concrete evidence base to guide policy makers to make informed decisions at local, national and international levels.

[1]  I. Rudan,et al.  Understanding biological mechanisms underlying adverse birth outcomes in developing countries: protocol for a prospective cohort (AMANHI bio–banking) study , 2017, Journal of global health.

[2]  D. Hamer,et al.  Development and validation of a simplified algorithm for neonatal gestational age assessment – protocol for the Alliance for Maternal Newborn Health Improvement (AMANHI) prospective cohort study , 2017, Journal of global health.

[3]  A. Zaidi,et al.  Ambulatory Treatment of Fast Breathing in Young Infants Aged <60 Days: A Double-Blind, Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Equivalence Trial in Low-Income Settlements of Karachi , 2017, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[4]  S. Cousens,et al.  Simplified antibiotic regimens for treatment of clinical severe infection in the outpatient setting when referral is not possible for young infants in Pakistan (Simplified Antibiotic Therapy Trial [SATT]): a randomised, open-label, equivalence trial , 2016, The Lancet. Global health.

[5]  Julie M. Herlihy,et al.  Burden, timing and causes of maternal and neonatal deaths and stillbirths in sub–Saharan Africa and South Asia: protocol for a prospective cohort study , 2016, Journal of global health.

[6]  R. Bahl,et al.  Burden of severe maternal morbidity and association with adverse birth outcomes in sub–Saharan Africa and south Asia: protocol for a prospective cohort study , 2016, Journal of global health.

[7]  D. Hamer,et al.  Neonatal mortality within 24 hours of birth in six low- and lower-middle-income countries , 2016, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[8]  M. I. Nisar,et al.  Implementation of the ANISA Study in Karachi, Pakistan: Challenges and Solutions , 2016, The Pediatric infectious disease journal.

[9]  A. Zaidi,et al.  A double blind community-based randomized trial of amoxicillin versus placebo for fast breathing pneumonia in children aged 2-59 months in Karachi, Pakistan (RETAPP) , 2015, BMC Infectious Diseases.

[10]  W. Weldon,et al.  Immunogenicity of poliovirus vaccines in chronically malnourished infants: A randomized controlled trial in Pakistan , 2015, Vaccine.

[11]  F. Esamai,et al.  Scientific Rationale for Study Design of Community-based Simplified Antibiotic Therapy Trials in Newborns and Young Infants With Clinically Diagnosed Severe Infections or Fast Breathing in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa , 2013, The Pediatric infectious disease journal.

[12]  Inacio Mandomando,et al.  Burden and aetiology of diarrhoeal disease in infants and young children in developing countries (the Global Enteric Multicenter Study, GEMS): a prospective, case-control study , 2013, The Lancet.

[13]  Z. Bhutta,et al.  Community-based Treatment of Serious Bacterial Infections in Newborns and Young Infants: A Randomized Controlled Trial Assessing Three Antibiotic Regimens , 2012, The Pediatric infectious disease journal.

[14]  Haider J. Warraich,et al.  Incidence and etiology of omphalitis in Pakistan: a community-based cohort study. , 2011, Journal of infection in developing countries.

[15]  A. Zaidi,et al.  Does improving maternal knowledge of vaccines impact infant immunization rates? A community-based randomized-controlled trial in Karachi, Pakistan , 2011, BMC public health.

[16]  A. Stein,et al.  Why do Families of Sick Newborns Accept Hospital Care? A Community-Based Cohort Study in Karachi, Pakistan , 2011, Journal of Perinatology.

[17]  S. Sultana,et al.  Incidence of pneumonia, bacteremia, and invasive pneumococcal disease in Pakistani children , 2010, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[18]  Haider J. Warraich,et al.  Population-based surveillance for severe rotavirus gastroenteritis in children in Karachi, Pakistan. , 2009, Vaccine.

[19]  ASM Nawshad Uddin Ahmed,et al.  Clinical signs that predict severe illness in children under age 2 months: a multicentre study , 2008, The Lancet.