Bayesian Active Questionnaire Design for Cause-of-Death Assignment Using Verbal Autopsies
Only about one-third of the deaths worldwide are assigned a medically-certified cause, and understanding the causes of deaths occurring outside of medical facilities is logistically and financially challenging. Verbal autopsy (VA) is a routinely used tool to collect information on cause of death in...
Saved in:
Main Authors | , , , , |
---|---|
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
16.02.2023
|
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
Cover
Loading…
Summary: | Only about one-third of the deaths worldwide are assigned a
medically-certified cause, and understanding the causes of deaths occurring
outside of medical facilities is logistically and financially challenging.
Verbal autopsy (VA) is a routinely used tool to collect information on cause of
death in such settings. VA is a survey-based method where a structured
questionnaire is conducted to family members or caregivers of a recently
deceased person, and the collected information is used to infer the cause of
death. As VA becomes an increasingly routine tool for cause-of-death data
collection, the lengthy questionnaire has become a major challenge to the
implementation and scale-up of VAs. In this paper, we propose a novel active
questionnaire design approach that optimizes the order of the questions
dynamically to achieve accurate cause-of-death assignment with the smallest
number of questions. We propose a fully Bayesian strategy for adaptive question
selection that is compatible with any existing probabilistic cause-of-death
assignment methods. We also develop an early stopping criterion that fully
accounts for the uncertainty in the model parameters. We also propose a
penalized score to account for constraints and preferences of existing question
structures. We evaluate the performance of our active designs using both
synthetic and real data, demonstrating that the proposed strategy achieves
accurate cause-of-death assignment using considerably fewer questions than the
traditional static VA survey instruments. |
---|---|
DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2302.08099 |