Verbal autopsies (VAs) are extensively used to investigate the population-level distributions of deaths by cause in low-resource settings without well-organized vital statistics systems. Computer-based methods are often adopted to assign causes of death to deceased individuals based on the interview responses of their family members or caregivers. In this article, we develop a new Bayesian approach that extracts information about cause-of-death distributions from VA data considering the age- and sex-related variation in the associations between symptoms. Its performance is compared with that of existing approaches using gold-standard data from the Population Health Metrics Research Consortium. In addition, we compute the relevance of predictors to causes of death based on information-theoretic measures.
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