South Africa - Dikgale HDSS INDEPTH Core Datase 1996-2014 (Release 2017)
Reference ID | INDEPTH.ZA021.CMD2014.v1 |
Year | 1996 - 2014 |
Country | South Africa |
Producer(s) |
Marianne Alberts - Dikgale HDSS , University of Limpopo (ZA021) Sandra Burger - Dikgale HDSS , University of Limpopo (ZA021) |
Sponsor(s) | Vlaamse Interuniversitaire Raad - VLIR - Current funder Norwegian Universities Committee for Development Research - NUFU - Prior Funder |
Collection(s) | |
Metadata | Documentation in PDF |
Created on
Jul 01, 2017
Last modified
Jul 01, 2017
Page views
53399
Overview
Identification
INDEPTH.ZA021.CMD2014.v1 |
Version
CMD2014.v1: Edited Core Microdata 2015, for public distribution, extracted on 20 May 2017. 2017-05-20
Overview
Changes in socio-economic status and lifestyle behaviors among the adult population in South Africa not only in urban areas but also in rural South Africa, have led to increased prevalence of chronic diseases and associated risk factors, together with an epidemic of some infectious diseases. Researchers at the University of the North (now University of Limpopo Turfloop campus) established The Dikgale centre for Health and Demographic surveillance system in 1996 funded by a core grant from NUFU, Norway. The broad aim of the Dikgale HDSS is to provide information to improve health of the people in Limpopo province and to assist the local government in making effective health care policy. As few data are available on the prevalence of diseases in rural and peri-urban areas of Limpopo province, the initial objective of the HDSS was to establish a field site where the incidence and prevalence of diseases could be assessed. It was therefore necessary to collect longitudinal demographic data (e.g. mortality, fertility, migration) on the population. To this end, three primary subjects are observed longitudinally in Dikgale HDSS: physical structures (e.g. homesteads, clinics and schools), households and individuals. The information about these subjects, and all related information, was at first stored in Access and later in a single MSSQL Server database, in a truly longitudinal way-i.e. not as a series of cross-sections.
The surveillance area is located in the Capricorn district, Limpopo province approximately 40 km from Polokwane, the capital city of Limpopo province and 15-50 km from the University of Limpopo (Turfloop campus). The site covers an area of approximately 200 square kilometers. The initially the total population was 8000 but the field site was expanded in 2010 and now includes approximately 36,000 people who are members of approximately 7000 households. The households are present in 15 villages of varying sizes. The population is predominantly Northern Sotho speaking. All households have electricity. Some households have piped water either inside the house or in their yards, but most fetch water from taps situated at strategic points in the villages. Most households have a pit latrine in their yards. A large proportion of adults are migrant workers, while others work as farm laborers on neighboring farms, or as domestic workers in nearby towns. Many are pensioners. The unemployment rate in the area is high.
To fulfil the eligibility criteria for the Dikgale HDSS cohort, individuals must be a member of a household within the surveillance area but not necessarily resident within it. Crucially, this means that Dikgale HDSS collects information on resident and non-resident members of households and makes a distinction between membership (self-defined on the basis of links to other household members) and residency (residing at a physical structure within the surveillance area at a particular point in time). Individuals can be members of more than one household at any point in time (e.g. polygamous married men whose wives maintain separate households). To be consistent with similar datasets from other INDEPTH Member centres, this data set contains data from resident members only.
During data collection, households are visited by fieldworkers and information supplied by a single key informant. All births, deaths and migrations of household members are recorded. If household members have moved internally within the surveillance area, such moves are reconciled and the internal migrant retains the original identifier associated with him/her.
Event history data
Individual
Scope
This study represents only a portion of the total data associated with the complete Dikgale demographic surveillance as described in the study abstract. It specifically only includes the events defining the resident exposure of individuals under surveillance as well as the delivery events of resident women. Each type of event contains minimal attributes describing the event: Attributes common to each event: Event Type, Event Date, Observation date
Migration: Origin & Destination
Death: Cause
Delivery: Live born and Still born counts, Parity
Topic | Vocabulary | URI |
---|---|---|
Demography [N01.224] | MeSH | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh |
Emigration and Immigration [N01.224.625.350] | MeSH | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh |
Mortality [N01.224.935.698] | MeSH | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh |
Birth Rate [N01.224.935.849.500] | MeSH | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh |
Coverage
Demographic surveillance area situated in Capricorn District 40 km north- east of Polokwane the capital city of Limpopo province. And 20 -30 km from the University of Limpopo. The area is approximately 310 square kilometers.Resident household members of households within the demographic surveillance area. Immigrants are defined by intention to become resident, but actual residence episodes of less than 180 days are censored. Outmigrants are defined by intention to become resident elsewhere, but actual periods of non-residence less than 180 days are censored. Children born to resident women are considered resident by default, irrespective of actual place of birth. The dataset contains the events of all individuals ever resident during the study period (only covering the original field site of 8000 people.(1 January,1996 to 31 Dec 2013)
Producers and Sponsors
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Marianne Alberts | Dikgale HDSS , University of Limpopo (ZA021) |
Sandra Burger | Dikgale HDSS , University of Limpopo (ZA021) |
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Tlouyamma Joseph | Dikgale HDSS - University of Limpopo | Data Manager |
Letsoalo Peter | Dikgale HDSS - University of Limpopo | Data Manager |
Name | Abbreviation | Role |
---|---|---|
Vlaamse Interuniversitaire Raad | VLIR | Current funder |
Norwegian Universities Committee for Development Research | NUFU | Prior Funder |
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Timotheus Darikwa | Dikgale HDSS,University of Limpopo (ZA021) | Data Specialist |
Ian Cook | Dikgale HDSS,University of Limpopo (ZA021) | Data Manager |
Metadata Production
Name | Abbreviation | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|---|
iSHARE2 Technical Team | iS2TT | INDEPTH Network | Technical Support |
INDEPTH Network | int.INDEPTH | INDEPTH Network | Agency |
Dikgale Health and Demographic Surveillance Site | ZA021 | University of Limpopo | Documentation of the study |
Tlouyamma Joseph | ZA021 | University of Limpopo | DDI Author |
DDI.INDEPTH.ZA021.CMD2014.V1