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Field: Child Nutrition and Water Access

The economic rationale for investing in stunting reduction

Verified

John Hoddinott, Harold Alderman, Jere R. Behrman, Lawrence Haddad et al.

Journal: Maternal and Child Nutrition
Year: 2013
Citations: 570

This paper outlines the economic rationale for investments that reduce stunting. We present a framework that illustrates the functional consequences of stunting in the 1000 days after conception throughout the life cycle: from childhood through to old age. We summarize the key empirical literature a...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Maternal health in poor countries: the broader context and a call for action

Verified

Véronique Filippi, Carine Ronsmans, Oona M. R. Campbell, Wendy Graham et al.

Journal: The LancetYear: 2006Citations: 543

In this paper, we take a broad perspective on maternal health and place it in its wider context. We draw attention to the economic and social vulnerability of pregnant women, and stress the importance of concomitant broader strategies, including poverty reduction and women's empowerment. We also con...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
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Water pollution in Bangladesh and its impact on public health

Verified

Md. Khalid Hasan, Abrar Shahriar, Kudrat Ullah Jim

Journal: HeliyonYear: 2019Citations: 536

Bangladesh - one of the most densely populated countries of the world- has plentiful water sources, but these sources are being polluted continuously. Both surface water and groundwater sources are contaminated with different contaminants like toxic trace metals, coliforms as well as other organic a...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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THE BANGLADESH DEVELOPMENT STUDIES

Verified

S. R. Osmani, Binayak Sen, Christopher Findlay

Year: 2009Citations: 514

Bangladesh has made great strides in improving the health of its population, much more than a country at its level of development can be expected to do. Serious problems still remain in reducing child malnutrition and maternal mortality in particular; nonetheless, the aggregative results achieved in...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
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Field trial of oral cholera vaccines in Bangladesh: results from three-year follow-up

Verified

John D. Clemens, J CLEMENS

Journal: The LancetYear: 1990Citations: 509

The protective efficacy (PE) of B subunit killed whole-cell (BS-WC) and killed whole-cell-only (WC) oral cholera vaccines was assessed in a randomised double-blind field trial among children aged 2-15 years and women over 15 years in rural Bangladesh. Among the 62 285 subjects who received three dos...

Life SciencesBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular BiologyEndocrinology
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Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture: What Role for Food Security in Bangladesh?

Verified

Esha Sraboni, Hazel Malapit, Agnes Quisumbing, Akhter Ahmed

Journal: World DevelopmentYear: 2014Citations: 490

Using nationally representative survey data from Bangladesh, we examine the relationship between women’s empowerment in agriculture and two measures of household food security: per adult equivalent calorie availability and dietary diversity. We use the Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index to ass...

Social SciencesEconomics, Econometrics and FinanceEconomics and EconometricsOpen Access
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Integrated management of childhood illness by outpatient health workers: technical basis and overview. The WHO Working Group on Guidelines for Integrated Management of the Sick Child.

Verified

S Gove

Journal: PubMedYear: 1997Citations: 486

This article describes the technical basis for the guidelines for the integrated management of childhood illness (IMCI), which are presented in the WHO/UNICEF training course on IMCI for outpatient health workers at first-level health facilities in developing countries. These guidelines include the ...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child HealthOpen Access
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DIETARY DIVERSITY AS A FOOD SECURITY INDICATOR

Verified

John Hoddinott, Yisehac Yohannes, Hoddinott, John, Yohannes, Yisehac

Journal: AgEcon Search (University of Minnesota, USA)Year: 2002Citations: 453

Household food security is an important measure of well-being. Although it may not encapsulate all dimensions of poverty, the inability of households to obtain access to enough food for an active, healthy life is surely an important component of their poverty. Accordingly, devising an appropriate me...

Health SciencesHealth ProfessionsGeneral Health ProfessionsOpen Access
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Effect of parental formal education on risk of child stunting in Indonesia and Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study

Verified

Richard D. Semba, Saskia de Pee, Kai Sun, Mayang Sari et al.

Journal: The LancetYear: 2008Citations: 437

Background Child stunting is associated with poor child development and increased mortality. Our aim was to determine the effect of length of maternal and paternal education on stunting in children under the age of 5 years. Methods Data for indicators of child growth and of parental education and so...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Effects of microbiota-directed foods in gnotobiotic animals and undernourished children

Verified

Jeanette L. Gehrig, Siddarth Venkatesh, Hao-Wei Chang, Matthew C. Hibberd et al.

Journal: ScienceYear: 2019Citations: 435

To examine the contributions of impaired gut microbial community development to childhood undernutrition, we combined metabolomic and proteomic analyses of plasma samples with metagenomic analyses of fecal samples to characterize the biological state of Bangladeshi children with severe acute malnutr...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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The Integrated Behavioural Model for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene: a systematic review of behavioural models and a framework for designing and evaluating behaviour change interventions in infrastructure-restricted settings

Verified

Robert Dreibelbis, Peter J. Winch, Elli Leontsini, Kristyna R. S. Hulland et al.

Journal: BMC Public HealthYear: 2013Citations: 412

BACKGROUND: Promotion and provision of low-cost technologies that enable improved water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) practices are seen as viable solutions for reducing high rates of morbidity and mortality due to enteric illnesses in low-income countries. A number of theoretical models, explanat...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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The WASH Benefits and SHINE trials: interpretation of WASH intervention effects on linear growth and diarrhoea

Verified

Amy J. Pickering, Clair Null, Peter J. Winch, Goldberg Mangwadu et al.

Journal: The Lancet Global HealthYear: 2019Citations: 409

Child stunting is a global problem and is only modestly responsive to dietary interventions. Numerous observational studies have shown that water quality, sanitation, and handwashing (WASH) in a household are strongly associated with linear growth of children living in the same household. We have co...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Effect of community-based peer counsellors on exclusive breastfeeding practices in Dhaka, Bangladesh: a randomised controlled trial

Verified

Rukhsana Haider, Ann Ashworth, Iqbal Kabir, Sharon Huttly

Journal: The LancetYear: 2000Citations: 405

Background Most mothers breastfeed in Bangladesh, but they rarely practise exclusive breastfeeding. Hospital-based strategies for breastfeeding promotion cannot reach them because about 95% have home deliveries. We postulated that with the intervention of trained peer counsellors, mothers could be e...

Health SciencesMedicineEpidemiology
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Cholera

Verified

John D. Clemens, G. Balakrish Nair, Tahmeed Ahmed, Firdausi Qadri et al.

Journal: The LancetYear: 2017Citations: 401

Cholera is an acute, watery diarrhoeal disease caused by Vibrio cholerae of the O1 or O139 serogroups. In the past two centuries, cholera has emerged and spread from the Ganges Delta six times and from Indonesia once to cause global pandemics. Rational approaches to the case management of cholera wi...

Life SciencesBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular BiologyEndocrinology
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Use of quantitative molecular diagnostic methods to assess the aetiology, burden, and clinical characteristics of diarrhoea in children in low-resource settings: a reanalysis of the MAL-ED cohort study

Verified

James A Platts-Mills, Jie Liu, Elizabeth T. Rogawski McQuade, Furqan Kabir et al.

Journal: The Lancet Global HealthYear: 2018Citations: 397

BACKGROUND: Optimum management of childhood diarrhoea in low-resource settings has been hampered by insufficient data on aetiology, burden, and associated clinical characteristics. We used quantitative diagnostic methods to reassess and refine estimates of diarrhoea aetiology from the Etiology, Risk...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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