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LONGITUDINAL STUDIES OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES AND PHYSICAL GROWTH OF CHILDREN IN RURAL BANGLADESH

Author Affiliations
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, University of Mary, Johns Hopkins University
Published InAmerican Journal of Epidemiology
Year1982
Citations284

Abstract

Longitudinal studies were done in two villages rural Bangladesh to learn more about the interactions between infectious diseases and the nutritional status of children. Diarrheal diseases, identified by surveillance of 197 children aged 2-60 months, were studied for bacterial, viral and parasitic enteropathogens in 1978-1979. The annual incidence of diarrhea was highest in children aged 2-11 months, and declined progressively with age from seven to four episodes per child per year. An enteropathogen was identified from rectal cultures taken during diarrhea in 51% of episodes and from 6% of monthly cultures taken when diarrhea was not present. Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli were the pathogens found most frequently, followed by shigellae and rotaviruses. Diarrheal episodes associated with shigellae had the longest duration,…
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