Morbidity pattern of infants in rural Bangladesh

This report is part of a prospective study Investigating the consequences of low birth weight on Infant growth, morbidity and feeding practices in rural Bangladesh. The study registered 644 infants who were followed-up for one year of their age. The study was conducted in three unions of Manikganj...

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Asıl Yazarlar: Gazi, Rukhsana, Karim, Fazlul, Chowdhury, AMR
Materyal Türü: Research report
Dil:English
Baskı/Yayın Bilgisi: BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED) 2020
Konular:
Online Erişim:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13580
id 10361-13580
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spelling 10361-135802020-01-16T21:01:38Z Morbidity pattern of infants in rural Bangladesh Gazi, Rukhsana Karim, Fazlul Chowdhury, AMR Infants Morbidity pattern Rural Bangladesh Low birth weight (LBW) Infants--Care Mothers--Mortality Rural health--Bangladesh. This report is part of a prospective study Investigating the consequences of low birth weight on Infant growth, morbidity and feeding practices in rural Bangladesh. The study registered 644 infants who were followed-up for one year of their age. The study was conducted in three unions of Manikganj district of rural Bangladesh during 1993-1994 to observe the morbidity pattern of infants, assess the treatment pattern for illnesses, and to study the consequence of Low birth weight (LBW) on morbidity during infancy. The overall prevalence of illness was 4.6% among infants aged under 1 year. ARI was most prevalent morbidity among infants under 1 year. An infant suffers from 3-4 episodes of ARI or 2 episodes of diarrhoea or 1 episodes of skin infection during the first year of life. Among infants of 5-12 month old, diarrhoeal disorders (watery, mucoid or bloody type) occurred more frequently comparison to infants of 1-4 months old. Low socioeconomic condition, illiteracy of parents. poor and unhygienic living condition, might be linked with infant morbidity. We found high morbidity prevalence among LBW infants compared to normal or high birth weight infants, but this difference was not statistically significant. Among infants who received any treatment, 71% got allopathic treatment, the main treatment provider being the village doctors. A large proportion of infants did not receive any treatment due to the perception that ··tor mild Illness treatment is not necessary. Community should get health education on prevention, care and danger signs of major illnesses such as ARI and diarrhoea. Provision of sanitary latrines, safe water, and promotion of health education on personal hygiene and environmental sanitation might reduce the risk of morbidity among infants. 2020-01-16T04:56:09Z 2020-01-16T04:56:09Z 1997-12 Research report Gazi, R., Karim, F., & Chowdhury, A. (1997, December). Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh. Research Reports (1997): Health Studies, Vol - XXI, 126–144. http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13580 en application/pdf BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
topic Infants
Morbidity pattern
Rural Bangladesh
Low birth weight (LBW)
Infants--Care
Mothers--Mortality
Rural health--Bangladesh.
spellingShingle Infants
Morbidity pattern
Rural Bangladesh
Low birth weight (LBW)
Infants--Care
Mothers--Mortality
Rural health--Bangladesh.
Gazi, Rukhsana
Karim, Fazlul
Chowdhury, AMR
Morbidity pattern of infants in rural Bangladesh
description This report is part of a prospective study Investigating the consequences of low birth weight on Infant growth, morbidity and feeding practices in rural Bangladesh. The study registered 644 infants who were followed-up for one year of their age. The study was conducted in three unions of Manikganj district of rural Bangladesh during 1993-1994 to observe the morbidity pattern of infants, assess the treatment pattern for illnesses, and to study the consequence of Low birth weight (LBW) on morbidity during infancy. The overall prevalence of illness was 4.6% among infants aged under 1 year. ARI was most prevalent morbidity among infants under 1 year. An infant suffers from 3-4 episodes of ARI or 2 episodes of diarrhoea or 1 episodes of skin infection during the first year of life. Among infants of 5-12 month old, diarrhoeal disorders (watery, mucoid or bloody type) occurred more frequently comparison to infants of 1-4 months old. Low socioeconomic condition, illiteracy of parents. poor and unhygienic living condition, might be linked with infant morbidity. We found high morbidity prevalence among LBW infants compared to normal or high birth weight infants, but this difference was not statistically significant. Among infants who received any treatment, 71% got allopathic treatment, the main treatment provider being the village doctors. A large proportion of infants did not receive any treatment due to the perception that ··tor mild Illness treatment is not necessary. Community should get health education on prevention, care and danger signs of major illnesses such as ARI and diarrhoea. Provision of sanitary latrines, safe water, and promotion of health education on personal hygiene and environmental sanitation might reduce the risk of morbidity among infants.
format Research report
author Gazi, Rukhsana
Karim, Fazlul
Chowdhury, AMR
author_facet Gazi, Rukhsana
Karim, Fazlul
Chowdhury, AMR
author_sort Gazi, Rukhsana
title Morbidity pattern of infants in rural Bangladesh
title_short Morbidity pattern of infants in rural Bangladesh
title_full Morbidity pattern of infants in rural Bangladesh
title_fullStr Morbidity pattern of infants in rural Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Morbidity pattern of infants in rural Bangladesh
title_sort morbidity pattern of infants in rural bangladesh
publisher BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13580
work_keys_str_mv AT gazirukhsana morbiditypatternofinfantsinruralbangladesh
AT karimfazlul morbiditypatternofinfantsinruralbangladesh
AT chowdhuryamr morbiditypatternofinfantsinruralbangladesh
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