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Results for “"Leanne Unicomb"”

16+ results

Effects of water quality, sanitation, handwashing, and nutritional interventions on diarrhoea and child growth in rural Bangladesh: a cluster randomised controlled trial

Verified

Stephen P. Luby, Mahbubur Rahman, Benjamin F. Arnold, Leanne Unicomb et al.

Journal: The Lancet Global HealthYear: 2018Citations: 793

BACKGROUND: Diarrhoea and growth faltering in early childhood are associated with subsequent adverse outcomes. We aimed to assess whether water quality, sanitation, and handwashing interventions alone or combined with nutrition interventions reduced diarrhoea or growth faltering. METHODS: The WASH B...

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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Household Environmental Conditions Are Associated with Enteropathy and Impaired Growth in Rural Bangladesh

Verified

Audrie Lin, Benjamin F. Arnold, Sadia Afreen, Rie Goto et al.

Journal: American Journal of Tropical Medicine and HygieneYear: 2013Citations: 349

We assessed the relationship of fecal environmental contamination and environmental enteropathy. We compared markers of environmental enteropathy, parasite burden, and growth in 119 Bangladeshi children (≤ 48 months of age) across rural Bangladesh living in different levels of household environmenta...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Menstrual hygiene management among Bangladeshi adolescent schoolgirls and risk factors affecting school absence: results from a cross-sectional survey

Verified

Mahbub‐Ul Alam, Stephen P. Luby, Amal Halder, Khairul Islam et al.

Journal: BMJ OpenYear: 2017Citations: 285

BACKGROUND: Many adolescent girls in low-income and middle-income countries lack appropriate facilities and support in school to manage menstruation. Little research has been conducted on how menstruation affects school absence. This study examines the association of menstrual hygiene management kno...

Health SciencesMedicinePublic Health, Environmental and Occupational HealthOpen Access
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Human, animal and environmental contributors to antibiotic resistance in low-resource settings: integrating behavioural, epidemiological and One Health approaches

Verified

Emily K. Rousham, Leanne Unicomb, Mohammad Aminul Islam

Journal: Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological SciencesYear: 2018Citations: 276

Antibiotic resistance (ABR) is recognized as a One Health challenge because of the rapid emergence and dissemination of resistant bacteria and genes among humans, animals and the environment on a global scale. However, there is a paucity of research assessing ABR contemporaneously in humans, animals...

Physical SciencesEnvironmental SciencePollutionOpen Access
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Cluster-randomised controlled trials of individual and combined water, sanitation, hygiene and nutritional interventions in rural Bangladesh and Kenya: the WASH Benefits study design and rationale

Verified

Benjamin F. Arnold, Clair Null, Stephen P. Luby, Leanne Unicomb et al.

Journal: BMJ OpenYear: 2013Citations: 267

INTRODUCTION: Enteric infections are common during the first years of life in low-income countries and contribute to growth faltering with long-term impairment of health and development. Water quality, sanitation, handwashing and nutritional interventions can independently reduce enteric infections ...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Animal Feces Contribute to Domestic Fecal Contamination: Evidence from <i>E. coli</i> Measured in Water, Hands, Food, Flies, and Soil in Bangladesh

Verified

Ayşe Ercümen, Amy J. Pickering, Laura H. Kwong, Benjamin F. Arnold et al.

Journal: Environmental Science & TechnologyYear: 2017Citations: 250

in food (p < 0.05). E. coli in stored water and food increased with increasing E. coli in soil, ponds, source water and hands. We provide empirical evidence of fecal transmission in the domestic environment despite on-site sanitation. Animal feces contribute to fecal contamination, and fecal indicat...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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The Effect of Handwashing at Recommended Times with Water Alone and With Soap on Child Diarrhea in Rural Bangladesh: An Observational Study

Verified

Stephen P. Luby, Amal Halder, Tarique Md. Nurul Huda, Leanne Unicomb et al.

Journal: PLoS MedicineYear: 2011Citations: 215

BACKGROUND: Standard public health interventions to improve hand hygiene in communities with high levels of child mortality encourage community residents to wash their hands with soap at five separate key times, a recommendation that would require mothers living in impoverished households to typical...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Evidence of High-Frequency Genomic Reassortment of Group A Rotavirus Strains in Bangladesh: Emergence of Type G9 in 1995

Verified

Leanne Unicomb, Goutam Podder, Jon R. Gentsch, Patricia Woods et al.

Journal: Journal of Clinical MicrobiologyYear: 1999Citations: 209

We characterized 1,534 rotavirus (RV) strains collected in Bangladesh from 1992 to 1997 to assess temporal changes in G type and to study the most common G and P types using reverse transcription-PCR, oligonucleotide probe hybridization, and monoclonal antibody-based enzyme immunoassay. Results from...

Health SciencesMedicineInfectious DiseasesOpen Access
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Interim evaluation of a large scale sanitation, hygiene and water improvement programme on childhood diarrhea and respiratory disease in rural Bangladesh

Verified

Tarique Md. Nurul Huda, Leanne Unicomb, Richard B. Johnston, Amal Halder et al.

Journal: Social Science & MedicineYear: 2011Citations: 149

Started in 2007, the Sanitation Hygiene Education and Water Supply in Bangladesh (SHEWA-B) project aims to improve the hygiene, sanitation and water supply for 20 million people in Bangladesh, and thus reduce disease among this population. This paper assesses the effectiveness of SHEWA-B on changing...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and Dietetics
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Drivers of Antibiotic Use in Poultry Production in Bangladesh: Dependencies and Dynamics of a Patron-Client Relationship

Verified

Abdullah Al Masud, Emily K. Rousham, Mohammad Aminul Islam, Mahbub‐Ul Alam et al.

Journal: Frontiers in Veterinary ScienceYear: 2020Citations: 139

Background: There is increasing concern around the use of antibiotics in animal food production and the risk of transmission of antimicrobial resistance within the food chain. In many low and middle-income countries, including Bangladesh, the commercial poultry sector comprises small-scale producers...

Life SciencesAgricultural and Biological SciencesGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesOpen Access
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Feasibility and effectiveness of oral cholera vaccine in an urban endemic setting in Bangladesh: a cluster randomised open-label trial

Verified

Firdausi Qadri, Mohammad Ali, Fahima Chowdhury, Ashraful Islam Khan et al.

Journal: The LancetYear: 2015Citations: 137

Background Cholera is endemic in Bangladesh with epidemics occurring each year. The decision to use a cheap oral killed whole-cell cholera vaccine to control the disease depends on the feasibility and effectiveness of vaccination when delivered in a public health setting. We therefore assessed the f...

Life SciencesBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular BiologyEndocrinology
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Designing a handwashing station for infrastructure-restricted communities in Bangladesh using the integrated behavioural model for water, sanitation and hygiene interventions (IBM-WASH)

Verified

Kristyna R. S. Hulland, Elli Leontsini, Robert Dreibelbis, Leanne Unicomb et al.

Journal: BMC Public HealthYear: 2013Citations: 127

BACKGROUND: In Bangladesh diarrhoeal disease and respiratory infections contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality. Handwashing with soap reduces the risk of infection; however, handwashing rates in infrastructure-restricted settings remain low. Handwashing stations--a dedicated, convenient...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Hyperimmune cow colostrum reduces diarrhoea due to rotavirus: a double‐blind, controlled clinical trial

Verified

AK Mitra, Dilip Mahalanabis, Hasan Ashraf, Leanne Unicomb et al.

Journal: Acta PaediatricaYear: 1995Citations: 126

The therapeutic efficacy of hyperimmune bovine colostrum (HBC) from cows immunized with four serotypes of human rotavirus was evaluated in a double-blind, randomized trial in 75 boys, aged 6-24 months, infected with rotavirus diarrhoea. The treatment group received 100 ml of HBC three times a day fo...

Health SciencesMedicineInfectious Diseases
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Molecular Characterization of Serotype G9 Rotavirus Strains from a Global Collection

Verified

Mohanraj Ramachandran, Carl D. Kirkwood, Leanne Unicomb, Nigel A. Cunliffe et al.

Journal: VirologyYear: 2000Citations: 123

Between 1992 and 1998, serotype G9 human rotavirus (RV) strains have been detected in 10 countries, including Thailand, India, Brazil, Bangladesh, Malawi, Italy, France, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia, suggesting the possible emergence of the fifth common serotype worldwide. Un...

Health SciencesMedicineInfectious Diseases
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