Completeness of birth registration (%) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Completeness of birth registration is the percentage of children under age 5 whose births were registered at the time of the survey. The numerator of completeness of birth registration includes children whose birth certificate was seen by the interviewer or whose mother or caretaker says the birth has been registered.

Source: UNICEF's State of the World's Children based mostly on household surveys and ministry of health data.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Tunisia 99.90 2018
2 Algeria 99.60 2019
3 Egypt 99.40 2014
4 São Tomé and Principe 98.60 2019
5 Morocco 96.90 2018
6 Congo 95.90 2015
7 Djibouti 91.70 2006
8 Cabo Verde 91.40 2010
9 Sierra Leone 90.40 2019
10 Gabon 89.60 2012
11 South Africa 89.00 2017
12 Botswana 87.50 2017
13 Comoros 87.30 2012
14 Mali 86.70 2018
15 Rwanda 85.60 2020
15 Benin 85.60 2018
17 Burundi 83.50 2017
18 Togo 82.90 2017
19 Senegal 78.70 2019
20 Madagascar 78.60 2018
21 Namibia 78.10 2016
22 Burkina Faso 76.90 2010
23 Côte d'Ivoire 71.70 2016
24 Ghana 70.60 2018
25 Sudan 67.30 2014
26 Malawi 67.20 2016
27 Kenya 66.90 2014
28 Liberia 66.30 2020
29 Mauritania 65.60 2015
30 Niger 63.90 2012
31 Guinea 62.00 2018
32 Cameroon 61.90 2018
33 The Gambia 59.00 2020
34 Mozambique 55.00 2015
35 Equatorial Guinea 53.50 2011
35 Eswatini 53.50 2014
37 Zimbabwe 48.70 2019
38 Guinea-Bissau 46.00 2019
39 Central African Republic 44.80 2019
40 Lesotho 44.50 2018
41 Nigeria 42.60 2018
42 Dem. Rep. Congo 40.10 2018
43 Uganda 32.20 2016
44 Tanzania 26.40 2016
45 Chad 25.70 2019
46 Angola 25.00 2016
47 Zambia 14.10 2018
48 Somalia 5.90 2020
49 Ethiopia 2.70 2016

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Health systems - the combined arrangements of institutions and actions whose primary purpose is to promote, restore, or maintain health (World Health Organization, World Health Report 2000) - are increasingly being recognized as key to combating disease and improving the health status of populations. The World Bank's Healthy Development: Strategy for Health, Nutrition, and Population Results emphasizes the need to strengthen health systems, which are weak in many countries, in order to increase the effectiveness of programs aimed at reducing specific diseases and further reduce morbidity and mortality. To evaluate health systems, the World Health Organization (WHO) has recommended that key components - such as financing, service delivery, workforce, governance, and information - be monitored using several key indicators. The data are a subset of the key indicators. Monitoring health systems allows the effectiveness, efficiency, and equity of different health system models to be compared. Health system data also help identify weaknesses and strengths and areas that need investment, such as additional health facilities, better health information systems, or better trained human resources. Numerous indicators have been proposed to assess a country's health information system.They can be grouped into two broad types: indicators related to data generation using core sources and methods (health surveys, civil registration, censuses, facility reporting, health system resource tracking) and indicators related to capacity for data synthesis, analysis, and validation. Indicators related to data generation reflect a country's capacity to collect relevant data at suitable intervals using the most appropriate data sources. Benchmarks include periodicity, timeliness, contents, and availability. Indicators related to capacity for synthesis, analysis, and validation measure the dimensions of the institutional frameworks needed to ensure data quality, including independence, transparency, and access. Benchmarks include the availability of independent coordination mechanisms and micro- and meta-data. Indicators related to data generation include completeness of birth registration. Birth registration refers to the permanent and official recording of a child's existence by some administrative levels of the State that is normally coordinated by a particular branch of the government. Completeness of birth registration indicator is related to the group of indictors of data generation.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual