The first meeting of the newly established national CRVS coordination mechanism was held 1 March in Male. The meeting brought together senior officials from the Ministry of Health, Department of National Registration, National Centre for Information Technology, and the National Bureau of Statistics and was chaired by the State Minister of Health. Challenges to improve the CRVS system were highlighted by the experiences with writing the first vital statistics report of the Maldives. The report writing was supported by the ESCAP project to strengthen national capacity in producing and disseminating vital statistics from civil registration in Asia and the Pacific. As a result of the meeting, a technical working group to review issues of data quality was established. This group will report back to the Committee. It was also agreed to increase the number of stakeholders invited for the next meeting and for the Committee to have frequent meetings. The meeting identified which agencies will be leading the review process of the CRVS system and be responsible for coordinating with other relevant agencies.
More News
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight September 2022) A multi-stakeholder group of participants from Lao…
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight August 2022) OpenCRVS launched version 1.0 on 29th June with panel…
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight August 2022) Verbal autopsy (VA) through face-to-face interviews with…
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight August 2022) Cambodia’s Ministry of Interior held a National…
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight July 2022) OpenCRVS will be launching version 1.0 of the open-source…
Newsletter: CRVS Insight July 2022 This month, our community newsletter would like to highlight Dr…
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight July 2022) ESCAP’s regional initiative to ‘Get Every One in the Picture…
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight July 2022) This week, experts from across the globe met in Copenhagen to…
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight July 2022) The e-learning course on Using Gender Data for Analysis,…
(Newsletter: CRVS Insight June 2022) Coding of cause of death data is essential for mortality…