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    South Africa - Agincourt HDSS INDEPTH Core Dataset 1993-2014 (Release 2016)

    Africa-2016
    Reference ID INDEPTH.ZA011.CMD2014.V1
    Year 1993 - 2014
    Country South Africa
    Producer(s) Professor Stephen Tollman - University of the Witwatersrand
    Professor Kathy Khan - University of the Witwatersrand
    Dr Mark Collinson - University of the Witwatersrand
    Professor Samuel Clar
    Sponsor(s) Wellcome Trust - -
    The National Institute of Ageing NIH - -
    Andrew W Mellon Foundation - -
    The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation - -
    South African Medical Research Council - -
    Collection(s)
    Africa Region – Release 2016
    Metadata PDF Documentation in PDF
    Created on
    Jul 01, 2016
    Last modified
    Jul 01, 2016
    Page views
    69807
    • Study Description
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    Overview
    Identification
    Country
    South Africa
    Title
    Agincourt HDSS INDEPTH Core Dataset 1993-2014 (Release 2016)

    Study Type
    Demographic Surveillance
    Series Information
    Rounds 1 to 20 of the annual demographic surveillance rounds

    ID Number
    INDEPTH.ZA011.CMD2014.V1
    Version
    Version Description
    CMD2014.V1: Edited dataset for public distribution

    Production Date
    2016-05-19
    Overview
    Abstract
    The Agincourt health and socio-demographic surveillance system (HDSS), located in rural northeast South Africa close to the Mozambique border, was established in 1992 to support district health systems development led by the post-apartheid ministry of health. The HDSS (90 000 people), based on an annual update of resident status and vital events, now supports multiple investigations into the causes and consequences of complex health, population and social transitions. Observational work includes cohorts focusing on different stages along the life course, evaluation of national policy at population, household and individual levels and examination of household responses to shocks and stresses and the resulting pathways influencing health and well-being. Trials target children and adolescents, including promoting psycho-social well-being, preventing HIV transmission and reducing metabolic disease risk. Efforts to enhance the research platform include using automated measurement techniques to estimate cause of death by verbal autopsy, full 'reconciliation' of in- and outmigrations, follow-up of migrants departing the study area, recording of extra-household social connections and linkage of individual HDSS records with those from sub-district clinics. Fostering effective collaborations (including INDEPTH multi-centre work in adult health and ageing and migration and urbanization), ensuring cross site compatibility of common variables and optimizing public access to HDSS data are priorities.

    Kind of Data
    Event history data

    Units of Analysis
    Individual

    Scope
    Notes
    Individual : Residence episodes and Residence Initiating and Terminating Events

    Topics
    TopicVocabularyURI
    Demography [N01.224] MesSHhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh
    Population [N01.600] MeSHhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh
    Keywords
    Fertility, Mortality, Migration, ADSS, AHDSS, Migrants, SES, Asset, HIV, Causes of Death, dataset, Surveillance, Demographic, Health, death, survey, wits, Agincourt, MRC, Public Health, Health Sciences, Demography, Data, IShare, Indepth
    Coverage
    Geographic Coverage
    The Agincourt HDSS covers an area of 420km2 comprising a sub-district of 27 villages with traditional and elected leadership. Since the democratic transition in 1994, infrastructure development has proceeded but at a rate below expectations: electricity is available in all villages, but the cost is too high for many households; few gravel roads have been tarred within the sub-district; a dam was constructed nearby, but to-date, there is no piped water to dwellings, and sanitation is rudimentary. Every village has a primary school and most a high school; however, the quality of education remains poor.14 Although almost all children enrol, educational progress is often delayed with few post-secondary opportunities. The area is dry in winter (from May to October), with soil more suited to game farming than agriculture. Households generally purchase maize and other foods, supplementing this with home-grown crops and collection of wild foods.15 South Africa’s non-contributory social grant system is a vital source of household income, notably the old age pension16 and child support grant.17–18 There are two health centres and six clinics within the sub-district, with three district hospitals 25–60km away.

    Universe
    Currently resident household members including temporary migrants approximately 90,000 indivudals in approximately 16 000 households

    Producers and Sponsors
    Primary Investigator(s)
    NameAffiliation
    Professor Stephen Tollman University of the Witwatersrand
    Professor Kathy Khan University of the Witwatersrand
    Dr Mark Collinson University of the Witwatersrand
    Professor Samuel Clark University of the Witwatersrand
    Other Producer(s)
    NameAffiliationRole
    Xavier Gomez-Olive University of the WitwatersrandResearch Manager
    Sulaimon Afolabi University of the WitwatersrandData Manager
    Pleasure Ngobeni University of the WitwatersrandData Manager
    Simon Mjoly University of the WitwatersrandData Manager
    Itayi Adam University of the WitwatersrandSystem Administrator
    Rirhandzu Mnisi University of the WitwatersrandData Entry Team leader
    Bernard Silaule University of the WitwatersrandField Project Manager
    Ryan Wagner University of the WitwatersrandCensus Project Manager
    University of the WitwatersrandData Entry Team leader
    Funding
    NameAbbreviationRole
    Wellcome Trust
    The National Institute of Ageing NIH
    Andrew W Mellon Foundation
    The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
    South African Medical Research Council
    Other Acknowledgements
    NameAffiliationRole
    Agincourt Community Members
    Metadata Production
    Metadata Produced By
    NameAbbreviationAffiliationRole
    iSHARE2 Technical TeamisTTINDEPTH NetworkTechnical Support
    INDEPTH Networkint.indepthINDEPTHAgency
    Agincourt HDSS Data SectionZA011Agincourt HDSS Centre, University of the WitwatersrandDocumentation of the Study
    Sulaimon A. AfolabiZA011Agincourt HDSS Centre, University of the WitwatersrandDDI Author
    Date of Metadata Production
    2016-05-19
    DDI Document Version
    Version 1 (May 2016)

    DDI Document ID
    DDI.INDEPTH.ZA011.CMD2014.v1

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