Yonas Asfaw, Isaac Boateng, Mauricio Calderon, Grazia Caleo, Lamin Allan Conteh, Salifu Conteh, Foday Dafae, Achintya Dey, Nadia Duffy, Daffney Davies, Patrick Fatoma, John Fleming, Boima Gogra, Yelena Gorina, Anna Grigoryan, Sara Hersey, Sam Hoare, Sonnia-Magba Bu-Buakei Jabbi, Amara Jambai, Joseph Jasperse, Reinhard Kaiser, Gandi Kallon, Ansumana Kamara, Fatmata Zara Kamara, Isata Pamela Kamara, Wogba Kamara, Joseph Kandeh, Mustapha Kanu, Mabinty Kargbo, Samuel Kargbo, Richard, Simeon Kuyembeh, Patrick Lansana, Fiona Mclysaght, Sheena McCann, Alhaji Samuka Nallo, Stephanie Ngai, Erin Nichols, Charles Njuguna, Shikanga O-Tipo, Sulaiman Parker, Nuzhat Rafique, John Redd, Thomas Samba, Kerry Souza, Alex Tran, and Chief Mathew Gibao Younge
By the end of the Ebola epidemic, death reporting in Sierra Leone (SL) became more acceptable amongst local populations, with nearly all deaths being reported to the Ebola hot line alert centers. To continue the positive momentum generated by the epidemic, the Sierra Leone Ministry of Health and Sanitation (MoHS) and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) organized and conducted the two-day Inter-agency Consultations on Improving Mortality Reporting in Sierra Leone (Consultations). In conjunction with the Consultations, participants were also offered a one-day, in-person training on the major components, characteristics, and uses of a national Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CRVS) system. To understand processes used by governmental and non-governmental organizations in collection of death data before and during the Ebola epidemic, and to develop recommendations on improving death reporting and CRVS in Sierra Leone. The Inter-agency Consultations were conducted in person over two days in October, 2015. Real-time notes were kept by CDC staff for later abstraction and summarizing. Presenters agreed to share their materials (usually PowerPoint presentations) and approved the summaries. Challenges to implementation and suggestions for improving death reporting were drawn from the presentations and from anonymous suggestions collected at the end of each of three days of the Consultations. The Consultations attracted more than 80 participants from 28 Sierra Leone governmental, business, and other non-governmental organizations. Over the course of 18 presentations, participants presented and discussed the ways deaths were reported before and during the Ebola epidemic and ways in which the CRVS in Sierra Leone might be improved. The presentations made clear the need to improve death reporting in order to improve the health status of Sierra Leone. Many presenters and participants discussed the challenges to improvements, including lack of infrastructure and country diversity. In addition, participants generally agreed upon the need for improving the government's understanding of the benefits of death reporting at multiple levels: from local chiefdom authorities and councils to the community and individual families. Despite the many challenges identified, all participants stressed the need for modernizing and improving death registration in Sierra Leone. The recommendations from the presentations and notes collected at the end of each day can be categorized within the following five domains: capacity building (organizational, staffing, infrastructure, policies, guidelines and tools), awareness and sensitization (including strategies to use best practices and emerging technologies), political will (governmental support and prioritization), funding (providing resources to achieve sustainability), and monitoring and evaluation (developing charts of existing death reporting pathways and identifying challenges).