dc.description.abstract |
Background: Departmental analysis of causes of death assists in defining hospital health
policy priorities. They are important in rural tertiary hospitals like Mankweng.
Aim: The aim of the study was to analyse the causes of death in inpatients over 12 years in
the Internal Medicine Department in Mankweng Hospital, Limpopo Province, South
Africa, from the 1st of June 2019 to the 1st of November 2019.
Methods: This was a five-month (1st June 2019 to 1st November 2019) retrospective
descriptive study with an analysis of the inpatients’ mortality profile in Mankweng
Hospital with emphasis on all deaths that occurred in the Internal Medicine wards (census
sampling). A questionnaire was designed and used to collect data from 228 deceased files.
The main causes of death by age group were determined. The effects of factors such as the
‘weekend effect’, deaths within 48 hours of admission, and the proportion of HIV/AIDS on
deaths, which have been identified globally as affecting inpatient mortality rates, were also
determined in this study. The collected data was analysed using Excel spreadsheets.
Results: A total of 228 medical records of deceased inpatients constituted the study
population. The median age was 56 (14-103) years and 51.3% of females died.
Communicable diseases accounted for 56.1% and non-communicable-related deaths
constituted 43.9%. Leading causes of death were pneumonia (30.5%) and cancer (33%)
with more (58) males dying from pneumonia and TB. Age was observed as significant
determinant of death. More than 90% of patients knew their HIV status, close to half
(46.9%) were HIV positive, 72% had a CD4 count < 200 cells/mm3 with only 25.2 percent
on ARVs. At least 120 (52.6%) of participants had comorbidities.
Conclusion: The mortality of Internal Medicine inpatients at Mankweng Hospital
demonstrates a dual burden of communicable and non-communicable diseases, as well as
an increase in the number of participants above 60 years dying within 48 hours of
admission and no ‘weekend effect’. This challenges national and provincial health system |
en_US |