Capacity Building Ensures Business Continuity for Mortality Coding in Papua New Guinea
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight June 2022)
The CRVS community in Asia and the Pacific has reflected on where it stands at the midpoint of the CRVS Decade (2015-2024) during the Second Ministerial Conference. Following this celebration of progress, many of our partners and member countries are leading actions to fill the remaining gaps. To learn more about CRVS in Asia and the Pacific, please subscribe to our newsletter, which offers a monthly panorama of CRVS actions throughout the region Previous editions can be found here. |
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight June 2022)
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight June 2022)
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight June 2022)
The document contains a description, drawing upon guidance issued by the World Health Organization and the United Nations Children’s Fund, of the proactive role that the health sector can play in ensuring that births and deaths are officially registered in national
civil registration systems. The description also covers the role of the health sector and of civil registration and vital statistics not only in tracking specific diseases, such as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), but also in ongoing efforts to track all-cause mortality and causes of death.
The document contains a discussion on the role of civil registration in national identity management system and how civil registration is a key basis for identity management systems that promote inclusion, and on how civil registration facilitates access to services and the production of timely and accurate vital statistics.
The second CRVS stakeholder consultation workshop in Vanuatu will take place on 18 May 2022, as part of the ongoing Business Process Improvement (BPI) project for birth and death registration.
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight May 2022)
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight May 2022)
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight May 2022)