Browsing by Author "Aggarwal, Abha"
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Item House-to-house survey vs. snowball technique for capturing maternal deaths in India: a search for a cost-effective method.(2007-04-30) Singh, Padam; Pandey, Arvind; Aggarwal, AbhaBACKGROUND & OBJECTIVE: Estimation of maternal mortality has been difficult because of large sample size requirement. A study using snowball technique for identification of households where maternal death has taken place and its related causes was conducted. We present here the feasibility of carrying out the snowball technique for capturing maternal deaths as against house-to-house survey and to obtain the estimates of maternal mortality ratio (MMR) in some selected States of India. METHODS: Five states representing high MMR (Uttar Pradesh), medium MMR (Maharashtra, Karnataka, Uttranchal) and low MMR (Delhi) were selected. A total of 8 PHCs and 3 (UFS) were covered. Study used both house-to-house survey and snowball technique to enumerate the maternal deaths in the selected PHCs in rural area and urban frame survey (UFS) in urban area. RESULTS: In all, 94 maternal deaths were captured through snowball technique as against 83 through house-to-house survey. The estimate of MMR for the five States combined was 356 per 100,000 live births, as compared to assumed 400 per 100,000 live births for the country as a whole. The relative standard error of the estimate of MMR was about 10 per cent. INTERPRETATION & CONCLUSION: Snowball technique captured more maternal deaths than those in house-to-house survey particularly in rural areas. The estimates also indicated the feasibility of replicating the proposed methodology for estimation of MMR as a time and cost-effective methodology.Item Inverse sampling to study disease burden of leprosy.(2010-10) Aggarwal, Abha; Pandey, ArvindBackground & objective: Estimation of disease burden due to leprosy by conventional sampling procedure is difficult due to large sample size requirement. In such situation, inverse sampling procedure could be a choice. A pilot study was undertaken to study the feasibility of adopting inverse sampling procedure over conventional sampling in an endemic area of Uttar Pradesh, India. Method: Two community development blocks one with low endemic, namely, Fatehganj, and other high endemic, Ramnagar, in Bareilly district of Uttar Pradesh, India, were selected. The Inverse sampling was adopted in Fatehganj and conventional cluster sampling was used in Ramnagar. As per the design of inverse sampling, 25 new cases of leprosy were to be detected from a population that could provide the cases. Under conventional sampling, a sample of 44,000 subjects (population) was targeted for the survey. Results: In Fatehganj, 25 new cases of leprosy were detected from a sample of 14734 individuals. In Ramnagar, a total of 63 new cases of leprosy were found after covering a sample of 44686 individuals. Both the techniques provided similar estimates. The precision obtained under inverse sampling was though less than that under conventional sampling but found to be more feasible and suitable for estimation of leprosy due to less population covered, time and cost. Interpretation & conclusion: Our findings showed that inverse sampling was advantageous over conventional sampling and could be adopted for the large scale survey at national level.Item Nutritional status and diet intake of preschool children in Delhi.(2002-07-31) Aggarwal, Abha; Singh, PadamItem Risk factors for maternal mortality in Delhi slums: A community-based case-control study.(2007-09-06) Aggarwal, Abha; Pandey, Arvind; Bhattacharya, B NBACKGROUND: In order to develop, implement and evaluate policy for reducing maternal mortality, it is essential to study the risk factors associated with maternal deaths. AIMS: The study aims to determine the epidemiological risk factors and its related causes associated with maternal deaths in Delhi slums. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A community-based case-control study was designed, wherein snowball-sampling method was used to identify the maternal deaths (cases) in the community and circular systematic random sampling procedure was used to select the controls from the same area where a maternal death was found. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Data on 70 cases and 384 controls that had live births as the outcome of the pregnancy were analyzed. Logistic regression was applied to identify the risk factors. RESULTS: In the study population, most of the deliveries were conducted at home by untrained 'dais.' Cases were mostly illiterate, young, having high parity and no antenatal care taken during pregnancy (P CONCLUSIONS: The study findings suggest that women should be educated about the importance of antenatal registration and regular checkups. Untrained 'dais' should be trained to recognize the obstetric complications at an early stage and refer high-risk cases for adequate management. These preventive measures could help in reducing maternal mortality at the community level.Item Strengthening ethics in clinical research.(2011-03) Pandey, Arvind; Aggarwal, Abha; Seth, S D; Maulik, Mohua; Juneja, Atul