37 results on '"Rasmussen, Zeba"'
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2. Global burden of acute lower respiratory infection associated with human parainfluenza virus in children younger than 5 years for 2018: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Wang, Xin, Li, You, Deloria-Knoll, Maria, Madhi, Shabir A, Cohen, Cheryl, Arguelles, Vina Lea, Basnet, Sudha, Bassat, Quique, Brooks, W Abdullah, Echavarria, Marcela, Fasce, Rodrigo A, Gentile, Angela, Goswami, Doli, Homaira, Nusrat, Howie, Stephen R C, Kotloff, Karen L, Khuri-Bulos, Najwa, Krishnan, Anand, Lucero, Marilla G, Lupisan, Socorro, Mathisen, Maria, McLean, Kenneth A, Mira-Iglesias, Ainara, Moraleda, Cinta, Okamoto, Michiko, Oshitani, Histoshi, O'Brien, Katherine L, Owor, Betty E, Rasmussen, Zeba A, Rath, Barbara A, Salimi, Vahid, Sawatwong, Pongpun, Scott, J Anthony G, Simões, Eric A F, Sotomayor, Viviana, Thea, Donald M, Treurnicht, Florette K, Yoshida, Lay-Myint, Zar, Heather J, Campbell, Harry, and Nair, Harish
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- 2021
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3. Global burden of acute lower respiratory infection associated with human metapneumovirus in children under 5 years in 2018: a systematic review and modelling study
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Libster, Romina, Otieno, Grieven, Joundi, Imane, Broor, Shobha, Nicol, Mark, Amarchand, Ritvik, Shi, Ting, López-Labrador, F. Xavier, Baker, Julia M., Jamison, Alexandra, Choudekar, Avinash, Juvekar, Sanjay, Obermeier, Patrick, Schweiger, Brunhilde, Madrid, Lola, Thomas, Elizabeth, Lanaspa, Miguel, Nohynek, Hanna, Nokes, James, Werner, Marta, Danhg, Anh, Chadha, Mandeep, Puig-Barberà, Joan, Caballero, Mauricio T., Mathisen, Maria, Walaza, Sibongile, Hellferscee, Orienka, Laubscher, Matt, Higdon, Melissa M., Haddix, Meredith, Sawatwong, Pongpun, Baggett, Henry C., Seidenberg, Phil, Mwanayanda, Lawrence, Antonio, Martin, Ebruke, Bernard E., Adams, Tanja, Rahman, Mustafizur, Rahman, Mohammed Ziaur, Sow, Samboa O., Baillie, Vicky L., Workman, Lesley, Toizumi, Michiko, Tapia, Milagritos D., Nguyen, Thi hien anh, Morpeth, Susan, Wang, Xin, Li, You, Deloria-Knoll, Maria, Madhi, Shabir A, Cohen, Cheryl, Ali, Asad, Basnet, Sudha, Bassat, Quique, Brooks, W Abdullah, Chittaganpitch, Malinee, Echavarria, Marcela, Fasce, Rodrigo A, Goswami, Doli, Hirve, Siddhivinayak, Homaira, Nusrat, Howie, Stephen R C, Kotloff, Karen L, Khuri-Bulos, Najwa, Krishnan, Anand, Lucero, Marilla G, Lupisan, Socorro, Mira-Iglesias, Ainara, Moore, David P, Moraleda, Cinta, Nunes, Marta, Oshitani, Histoshi, Owor, Betty E, Polack, Fernando P, O'Brien, Katherine L, Rasmussen, Zeba A, Rath, Barbara A, Salimi, Vahid, Scott, J Anthony G, Simões, Eric A F, Strand, Tor A, Thea, Donald M, Treurnicht, Florette K, Vaccari, Linda C, Yoshida, Lay-Myint, Zar, Heather J, Campbell, Harry, and Nair, Harish
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- 2021
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4. Global burden of respiratory infections associated with seasonal influenza in children under 5 years in 2018: a systematic review and modelling study
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Nair, Harish, Campbell, Harry, Wang, Xin, Li, You, Chung, Alexandria, Rahi, Manveer, Abbas, Qalab, Ali, Asad, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A, Saeed, Bushra, Soofi, Sajid B, Yousafzai, Mohammad Tahir, Zaidi, Anita K, Amu, Alberta, Awini, Elizabeth, Azziz-Baumgartner, Eduardo, Baggett, Henry C, Chaves, Sandra S, Shang, Nong, Schrag, Stephanie J, Widdowson, Marc-Alain, Tempia, Stefano, Bassat, Quique, Lanaspa, Miguel, Acácio, Sozinho, Brooks, W Abdullah, Driscoll, Amanda, Knoll, Maria Deloria, O'Brien, Katherine L, Prosperi, Christine, Baqui, Abdullah H, Mullany, Luke, Byass, Peter, Cohen, Cheryl, von Gottberg, Anne, Hellferscee, Orienka, Treurnicht, Florette K, Walaza, Sibongile, Goswami, Doli, Rahman, Mustafizur, Connor, Nicholas E, El Arifeen, Shams, Echavarria, Marcela, Marcone, Débora N, Reyes, Noelia, Gutierrez, Andrea, Rodriguez, Ivan, Lopez, Olga, Ortiz, David, Gonzalez, Nathaly, Gentile, Angela, del Valle Juarez, Maria, Gordon, Aubree, Cutland, Clare, Groome, Michelle, Madhi, Shabir A, Nunes, Marta C, Nzenze, Susan, Heikkinen, Terho, Hirve, Siddhivinayak, Juvekar, Sanjay, Halasa, Natasha, Jara, Jorge H, Bernart, Chris, Katz, Mark A, Gofer, Ilan, Avni, Yonat Shemer, Khuri-Bulos, Najwa, Faori, Samir, Shehabi, Asem, Krishnan, Anand, Kumar, Rakesh, Amarchand, Ritvik, Contreras, Carmen L, de Leon, Oscar, Lopez, Maria R, McCracken, John P, Maldonado, Herberth, Samayoa, Antonio P, Gomez, Ana B, Lucero, Marilla G, Nillos, Leilani T, Lupisan, Socorro P, Nohynek, Hanna, Mira-Iglesias, Ainara, Puig-Barberà, Joan, Díez-Domingo, Javier, Gessner, Bradford D, Njanpop-Lafourcade, Berthe-Marie, Moïsi, Jennifer C, Tall, Haoua, Munywoki, Patrick K, Ngama, Mwanjuma, Nokes, D James, Omer, Saad B, Clark, Dayna R, Ourohiré, Millogo, Ali, Sié, Pascal, Zabré, Cheik, Bagagnan H, Caballero, Mauricio T, Libster, Romina, Polack, Fernando P, Rasmussen, Zeba A, Thomas, Elizabeth D, Baker, Julia M, Rath, Barbara A, Obermeier, Patrick E, Hassanuzzaman, MD., Islam, Maksuda, Islam, Mohammad S, Saha, Samir K, Panigrahi, Pinaki, Bose, Anuradha, Isaac, Rita, Murdoch, David, Nanda, Pritish, Qazi, Shamim A, Hessong, Danielle, Simőes, Eric AF, Sotomayor, Viviana, Thamthitiwat, Somsak, Chittaganpitch, Malinee, Dawood, Halima, Kyobutungi, Catherine, Wamukoya, Marylene, Ziraba, Abdhalah K, Yoshida, Lay-Myint, Yoshihara, Keisuke, Dand, Duc-Anh, Le, Minh-Nhat, Nicol, Mark P, Zar, Heather J, Broor, Shobha, Chadha, Mandeep, Madrid, Lola, Gresh, Lionel, Balmaseda, Angel, Kuan, Guillermina, Wairagkar, Niteen, Tapia, Milagritos D, Knobler, Stacey L, Barahona, Alfredo, Ferguson, Ericka, Schweiger, Brunhilde, Abdullah Brooks, W, Fasce, Rodrigo A, and Simões, Eric AF
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- 2020
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5. Assessing Development across Cultures: Invariance of the Bayley-III Scales across Seven International MAL-ED Sites
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Pendergast, Laura L., Schaefer, Barbara A., Murray-Kolb, Laura E., Svensen, Erling, Shrestha, Rita, Rasheed, Muneera A., Scharf, Rebecca J., Kosek, Margaret, Vasquez, Angel Orbe, Maphula, Angelina, Costa, Hilda, Rasmussen, Zeba A., Yousafzai, Aisha, Tofail, Fahmida, and Seidman, Jessica C.
- Abstract
The Bayley's Scales of Infant and Toddler Development-Third Edition (Bayley-III) were used to measure the development of 24-month-old children (N = 1,452) in the Interactions of Malnutrition and Enteric Infections: Consequences for Child Health and Development (MAL-ED) study (an international, multisite study on many aspects of child development). This study examined the factor structure and measurement equivalence/invariance of Bayley-III scores across 7 international research sites located in Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Peru, and South Africa. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were used to identify the factor structure of Bayley-III scores. Subsequently, reliability analyses and item response theory analyses were applied, and invariance was examined using multiple-indicator, multiple-cause modeling. The findings supported the validity, but not invariance, of Bayley-III language scores at all seven sites and of the cognitive and motor scores at six sites. These findings provide support for the use of scores for research purposes, but mean comparison between sites is not recommended. Impact and Implications: In measurement, validity refers to the extent to which we are measuring what we intend to measure and the appropriateness of inferences we make based on our measurements. The validity of scores from measures often varies across cultures, and this study examined the validity of a measure of child development among children from sites in seven low- and middle-income countries. The findings indicate that the majority of the scores are valid for research, but measurement differences are evident such that it is not appropriate to compare mean scores across sites. [Co-written with the MAL-ED Network Investigators.]
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- 2018
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6. Approach Temperament across Cultures: Validity of the Infant Temperament Scale in MAL-ED
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Pendergast, Laura L., Jones, Paul, Scharf, Rebecca, Rasheed, Muneera, Schaefer, Barbara A., Murray-Kolb, Laura E., Rasmussen, Zeba, Svensen, Erling, Tofail, Fahmida, Seidman, Jessica C., and Caulfield, Laura E.
- Abstract
Characteristics of temperament have been shown to predict aspects of personality and psychopathology. Approach temperament (i.e., sensitivity, reactivity, and behavioral disposition toward reward stimuli) may be a particularly salient predictor of developmental outcomes (e.g., Nigg, 2006; Shiner & Caspi, 2003). However, there is little research on approach temperament among children from low- and middle-income nations. This study examined the validity of an adapted version of the Infant Temperament Scale across eight international sites with a focus on approach temperament. Our sample included 1,933 infants from eight study sites in low- and middle-income nations: Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Nepal, Peru, Pakistan, South Africa, and Tanzania. The Infant Temperament Scale was translated and administered as a structured interview to caregivers at each site. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were used to examine the factor structure of the scale, and multiple indicator multiple cause (MIMIC) modeling was used to examine invariance of scores across sites. The findings supported the validity of an approach temperament factor. Although the findings did not support the cross-cultural use of the entire Infant Temperament Scale among individuals from low- and middle-income nations in our sample, the supported approach temperament factor is a theoretically important subconstruct. Moreover, the inability to measure other aspects of temperament across cultures may have important implications for researchers interested in the nature of temperament. Implications and future directions are discussed. [Co-written with The MAL-ED Network Investigators.]
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- 2018
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7. 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
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Acosta, Angel Mendez, Rios de Burga, Rosa, Chavez, Cesar Banda, Flores, Julian Torres, Olotegui, Maribel Paredes, Pinedo, Silvia Rengifo, Trigoso, Dixner Rengifo, Vasquez, Angel Orbe, Ahmed, Imran, Alam, Didar, Ali, Asad, Rasheed, Muneera, Soofi, Sajid, Turab, Ali, Yousafzai, Aisha, Zaidi, Anita KM, Shrestha, Binob, Rayamajhi, Bishnu Bahadur, Strand, Tor, Ammu, Geetha, Babji, Sudhir, Bose, Anuradha, George, Ajila T, Hariraju, Dinesh, Jennifer, M. Steffi, John, Sushil, Kaki, Shiny, Karunakaran, Priyadarshani, Koshy, Beena, Lazarus, Robin P, Muliyil, Jayaprakash, Ragasudha, Preethi, Raghava, Mohan Venkata, Raju, Sophy, Ramachandran, Anup, Ramadas, Rakhi, Ramanujam, Karthikeyan, Rose, Anuradha, Roshan, Reeba, Sharma, Srujan L, Sundaram, Shanmuga, Thomas, Rahul J, Pan, William K, Ambikapathi, Ramya, Carreon, J Daniel, Doan, Viyada, Hoest, Christel, Knobler, Stacey, Miller, Mark A, Psaki, Stephanie, Rasmussen, Zeba, Richard, Stephanie A, Tountas, Karen H, Svensen, Erling, Amour, Caroline, Bayyo, Eliwaza, Mvungi, Regisiana, Pascal, John, Yarrot, Ladislaus, Barrett, Leah, Dillingham, Rebecca, Petri, William A, Scharf, Rebecca, Ahmed, AM Shamsir, Alam, Md Ashraful, Haque, Umma, Hossain, Md Iqbal, Islam, Munirul, Mahfuz, Mustafa, Mondal, Dinesh, Nahar, Baitun, Tofail, Fahmida, Chandyo, Ram Krishna, Shrestha, Prakash Sunder, Shrestha, Rita, Ulak, Manjeswori, Bauck, Aubrey, Black, Robert, Caulfield, Laura, Checkley, William, Lee, Gwenyth, Schulze, Kerry, Scott, Samuel, Murray-Kolb, Laura E, Ross, A Catharine, Schaefer, Barbara, Simons, Suzanne, Pendergast, Laura, Abreu, Cláudia B, Costa, Hilda, Di Moura, Alessandra, Filho, José Quirino, Leite, Álvaro M, Lima, Noélia L, Lima, Ila F, Maciel, Bruna LL, Medeiros, Pedro HQS, Moraes, Milena, Mota, Francisco S, Oriá, Reinaldo B, Quetz, Josiane, Soares, Alberto M, Mota, Rosa MS, Patil, Crystal L, Mahopo, Cloupas, Maphula, Angelina, Nyathi, Emanuel, Platts-Mills, James A, Liu, Jie, Rogawski, Elizabeth T, Kabir, Furqan, Lertsethtakarn, Paphavee, Siguas, Mery, Khan, Shaila S, Praharaj, Ira, Murei, Arinao, Nshama, Rosemary, Mujaga, Buliga, Havt, Alexandre, Maciel, Irene A, McMurry, Timothy L, Operario, Darwin J, Taniuchi, Mami, Gratz, Jean, Stroup, Suzanne E, Roberts, James H, Kalam, Adil, Aziz, Fatima, Qureshi, Shahida, Islam, M Ohedul, Sakpaisal, Pimmada, Silapong, Sasikorn, Yori, Pablo P, Rajendiran, Revathi, Benny, Blossom, McGrath, Monica, McCormick, Benjamin J J, Seidman, Jessica C, Lang, Dennis, Gottlieb, Michael, Guerrant, Richard L, Lima, Aldo A M, Leite, Jose Paulo, Samie, Amidou, Bessong, Pascal O, Page, Nicola, Bodhidatta, Ladaporn, Mason, Carl, Shrestha, Sanjaya, Kiwelu, Ireen, Mduma, Estomih R, Iqbal, Najeeha T, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A, Ahmed, Tahmeed, Haque, Rashidul, Kang, Gagandeep, Kosek, Margaret N, and Houpt, Eric R
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- 2018
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8. Use of quantitative molecular diagnostic methods to investigate the effect of enteropathogen infections on linear growth in children in low-resource settings: longitudinal analysis of results from the MAL-ED cohort study
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Acosta, Angel Mendez, Rios de Burga, Rosa, Chavez, Cesar Banda, Flores, Julian Torres, Olotegui, Maribel Paredes, Pinedo, Silvia Rengifo, Trigoso, Dixner Rengifo, Vasquez, Angel Orbe, Ahmed, Imran, Alam, Didar, Ali, Asad, Rasheed, Muneera, Soofi, Sajid, Turab, Ali, Yousafzai, Aisha, Zaidi, Anita KM, Shrestha, Binob, Rayamajhi, Bishnu Bahadur, Strand, Tor, Ammu, Geetha, Babji, Sudhir, Bose, Anuradha, George, Ajila T, Hariraju, Dinesh, Jennifer, M. Steffi, John, Sushil, Kaki, Shiny, Karunakaran, Priyadarshani, Koshy, Beena, Lazarus, Robin P, Muliyil, Jayaprakash, Ragasudha, Preethi, Raghava, Mohan Venkata, Raju, Sophy, Ramachandran, Anup, Ramadas, Rakhi, Ramanujam, Karthikeyan, Rose, Anuradha, Roshan, Reeba, Sharma, Srujan L, Sundaram, Shanmuga, Thomas, Rahul J, Pan, William K, Ambikapathi, Ramya, Carreon, J Daniel, Doan, Viyada, Hoest, Christel, Knobler, Stacey, Miller, Mark A, Psaki, Stephanie, Rasmussen, Zeba, Richard, Stephanie A, Tountas, Karen H, Svensen, Erling, Amour, Caroline, Bayyo, Eliwaza, Mvungi, Regisiana, Pascal, John, Yarrot, Ladislaus, Barrett, Leah, Dillingham, Rebecca, Petri, William A, Scharf, Rebecca, Ahmed, AM Shamsir, Alam, Md Ashraful, Haque, Umma, Hossain, Md Iqbal, Islam, Munirul, Mahfuz, Mustafa, Mondal, Dinesh, Nahar, Baitun, Tofail, Fahmida, Chandyo, Ram Krishna, Shrestha, Prakash Sunder, Shrestha, Rita, Ulak, Manjeswori, Bauck, Aubrey, Black, Robert, Caulfield, Laura, Checkley, William, Lee, Gwenyth, Schulze, Kerry, Scott, Samuel, Murray-Kolb, Laura E, Ross, A Catharine, Schaefer, Barbara, Simons, Suzanne, Pendergast, Laura, Abreu, Cláudia B, Costa, Hilda, Di Moura, Alessandra, Filho, José Quirino, Leite, Álvaro M, Lima, Noélia L, Lima, Ila F, Maciel, Bruna LL, Medeiros, Pedro HQS, Moraes, Milena, Mota, Francisco S, Oriá, Reinaldo B, Quetz, Josiane, Soares, Alberto M, Mota, Rosa MS, Patil, Crystal L, Mahopo, Cloupas, Maphula, Angelina, Nyathi, Emanuel, Rogawski, Elizabeth T, Liu, Jie, Platts-Mills, James A, Kabir, Furqan, Lertsethtakarn, Paphavee, Siguas, Mery, Khan, Shaila S, Praharaj, Ira, Murei, Arinao, Nshama, Rosemary, Mujaga, Buliga, Havt, Alexandre, Maciel, Irene A, Operario, Darwin J, Taniuchi, Mami, Gratz, Jean, Stroup, Suzanne E, Roberts, James H, Kalam, Adil, Aziz, Fatima, Qureshi, Shahida, Islam, M Ohedul, Sakpaisal, Pimmada, Silapong, Sasikorn, Yori, Pablo P, Rajendiran, Revathi, Benny, Blossom, McGrath, Monica, Seidman, Jessica C, Lang, Dennis, Gottlieb, Michael, Guerrant, Richard L, Lima, Aldo A M, Leite, Jose Paulo, Samie, Amidou, Bessong, Pascal O, Page, Nicola, Bodhidatta, Ladaporn, Mason, Carl, Shrestha, Sanjaya, Kiwelu, Ireen, Mduma, Estomih R, Iqbal, Najeeha T, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A, Ahmed, Tahmeed, Haque, Rashidul, Kang, Gagandeep, Kosek, Margaret N, and Houpt, Eric R
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- 2018
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9. Measuring home environments across cultures: Invariance of the HOME scale across eight international sites from the MAL-ED study
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Jones, Paul C., Pendergast, Laura L., Schaefer, Barbara A., Rasheed, Muneera, Svensen, Erling, Scharf, Rebecca, Shrestha, Rita, Maphula, Angelina, Roshan, Reeba, Rasmussen, Zeba, Seidman, Jessica C., and Murray-Kolb, Laura E.
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- 2017
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10. Global, regional, and national disease burden estimates of acute lower respiratory infections due to respiratory syncytial virus in young children in 2015: a systematic review and modelling study
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Shi, Ting, McAllister, David A, O'Brien, Katherine L, Simoes, Eric A F, Madhi, Shabir A, Gessner, Bradford D, Polack, Fernando P, Balsells, Evelyn, Acacio, Sozinho, Aguayo, Claudia, Alassani, Issifou, Ali, Asad, Antonio, Martin, Awasthi, Shally, Awori, Juliet O, Azziz-Baumgartner, Eduardo, Baggett, Henry C, Baillie, Vicky L, Balmaseda, Angel, Barahona, Alfredo, Basnet, Sudha, Bassat, Quique, Basualdo, Wilma, Bigogo, Godfrey, Bont, Louis, Breiman, Robert F, Brooks, W Abdullah, Broor, Shobha, Bruce, Nigel, Bruden, Dana, Buchy, Philippe, Campbell, Stuart, Carosone-Link, Phyllis, Chadha, Mandeep, Chipeta, James, Chou, Monidarin, Clara, Wilfrido, Cohen, Cheryl, de Cuellar, Elizabeth, Dang, Duc-Anh, Dash-yandag, Budragchaagiin, Deloria-Knoll, Maria, Dherani, Mukesh, Eap, Tekchheng, Ebruke, Bernard E, Echavarria, Marcela, de Freitas Lázaro Emediato, Carla Cecília, Fasce, Rodrigo A, Feikin, Daniel R, Feng, Luzhao, Gentile, Angela, Gordon, Aubree, Goswami, Doli, Goyet, Sophie, Groome, Michelle, Halasa, Natasha, Hirve, Siddhivinayak, Homaira, Nusrat, Howie, Stephen R C, Jara, Jorge, Jroundi, Imane, Kartasasmita, Cissy B, Khuri-Bulos, Najwa, Kotloff, Karen L, Krishnan, Anand, Libster, Romina, Lopez, Olga, Lucero, Marilla G, Lucion, Florencia, Lupisan, Socorro P, Marcone, Debora N, McCracken, John P, Mejia, Mario, Moisi, Jennifer C, Montgomery, Joel M, Moore, David P, Moraleda, Cinta, Moyes, Jocelyn, Munywoki, Patrick, Mutyara, Kuswandewi, Nicol, Mark P, Nokes, D James, Nymadawa, Pagbajabyn, da Costa Oliveira, Maria Tereza, Oshitani, Histoshi, Pandey, Nitin, Paranhos-Baccalà, Gláucia, Phillips, Lia N, Picot, Valentina Sanchez, Rahman, Mustafizur, Rakoto-Andrianarivelo, Mala, Rasmussen, Zeba A, Rath, Barbara A, Robinson, Annick, Romero, Candice, Russomando, Graciela, Salimi, Vahid, Sawatwong, Pongpun, Scheltema, Nienke, Schweiger, Brunhilde, Scott, J Anthony G, Seidenberg, Phil, Shen, Kunling, Singleton, Rosalyn, Sotomayor, Viviana, Strand, Tor A, Sutanto, Agustinus, Sylla, Mariam, Tapia, Milagritos D, Thamthitiwat, Somsak, Thomas, Elizabeth D, Tokarz, Rafal, Turner, Claudia, Venter, Marietjie, Waicharoen, Sunthareeya, Wang, Jianwei, Watthanaworawit, Wanitda, Yoshida, Lay-Myint, Yu, Hongjie, Zar, Heather J, Campbell, Harry, and Nair, Harish
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- 2017
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11. Examining the relationships between early childhood experiences and adolescent and young adult health status in a resource-limited population: A cohort study
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Rasmussen, Zeba A., Shah, Wasiat H., Hansen, Chelsea L., Azam, Syed Iqbal, Hussain, Ejaz, Schaefer, Barbara A., Zhong, Nicole, Jamison, Alexandra F., Ahmed, Khalil, and McCormick, Benjamin J. J.
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Young adults -- Health aspects -- Psychological aspects ,Teenagers -- Health aspects -- Social aspects ,Youth -- Health aspects -- Social aspects ,Poor -- Health aspects -- Social aspects ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Background Adolescence is a critical point in the realization of human capital, as health and educational decisions with long-term impacts are made. We examined the role of early childhood experiences on health, cognitive abilities, and educational outcomes of adolescents followed up from a longitudinal cohort study in Pakistan, hypothesizing that early childhood experiences reflecting poverty would manifest in reduced health and development in adolescence. Methods and findings Adolescents/young adults previously followed as children aged under 5 years were interviewed. Childhood data were available on diarrhea, pneumonia, and parental/household characteristics. New data were collected on health, anthropometry, education, employment, and languages spoken; nonverbal reasoning was assessed. A multivariable Bayesian network was constructed to explore structural relationships between variables. Of 1,868 children originally enrolled, 1,463 (78.3%) were interviewed as adolescents (range 16.0-29.3 years, mean age 22.6 years); 945 (65%) lived in Oshikhandass. While 1,031 (70.5%) of their mothers and 440 (30.1%) of their fathers had received no formal education, adolescents reported a mean of 11.1 years of education. Childhood diarrhea (calculated as episodes/child-year) had no association with nonverbal reasoning score (an arc was supported in just 4.6% of bootstrap samples), health measures (with BMI, 1% of bootstrap samples; systolic and diastolic blood pressure, 0.1% and 1.6% of bootstrap samples, respectively), education (0.7% of bootstrap samples), or employment (0% of bootstrap samples). Relationships were found between nonverbal reasoning and adolescent height (arc supported in 63% of bootstrap samples), age (84%), educational attainment (100%), and speaking English (100%); speaking English was linked to the childhood home environment, mediated through maternal education and primary language. Speaking English (n = 390, 26.7% of adolescents) was associated with education (100% of bootstrap samples), self-reported child health (82%), current location (85%) and variables describing childhood socioeconomic status. The main limitations of this study were the lack of parental data to characterize the home setting (including parental mental and physical health, and female empowerment) and reliance on self-reporting of health status. Conclusions In this population, investments in education, especially for females, are associated with an increase in human capital. Against the backdrop of substantial societal change, with the exception of a small and indirect association between childhood malnutrition and cognitive scores, educational opportunities and cultural language groups have stronger associations with aspects of human capital than childhood morbidity., Author(s): Zeba A. Rasmussen 1,*, Wasiat H. Shah 2, Chelsea L. Hansen 1, Syed Iqbal Azam 3, Ejaz Hussain 4, Barbara A. Schaefer 5, Nicole Zhong 5, Alexandra F. Jamison [...]
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- 2021
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12. Postpartum depressive symptoms across time and place: Structural invariance of the Self-Reporting Questionnaire among women from the international, multi-site MAL-ED study
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Pendergast, Laura L., Scharf, Rebecca J., Rasmussen, Zeba A., Seidman, Jessica C., Schaefer, Barbara A., Svensen, Erling, Tofail, Fahmida, Koshy, Beena, Kosek, Margaret, Rasheed, Muneera A., Roshan, Reeba, Maphula, Angelina, Shrestha, Rita, and Murray-Kolb, Laura E.
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- 2014
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13. The MAL-ED Cohort Study: Methods and Lessons Learned When Assessing Early Child Development and Caregiving Mediators in Infants and Young Children in 8 Low- and Middle-Income Countries
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The MAL-ED Network Investigators, Murray-Kolb, Laura E., Rasmussen, Zeba A., Scharf, Rebecca J., Rasheed, Muneera A., Svensen, Erling, Seidman, Jessica C., Tofail, Fahmida, Koshy, Beena, Shrestha, Rita, Maphula, Angelina, Vasquez, Angel Orbe, da Costa, Hilda P., Yousafzai, Aisha K., Oria, Reinaldo B., Roshan, Reeba, Bayyo, Eliwasa B., Kosek, Margaret, Shrestha, Sanjaya, Schaefer, Barbara A., Bessong, Pascal, Ahmed, Tahmeed, and Lang, Dennis
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- 2014
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14. Randomized controlled trial of standard versus double dose cotrimoxazole for childhood pneumonia in Pakistan
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Rasmussen Zeba A., Bari Abdul, Qazi Shamim, Rehman Gul, Azam Iqbal, Khan SherBaz, Aziz Farida, Rafi Sadia, Roghani Mehr Taj, Iqbal Imran, Nagi Abdul Ghaffar, Hussain Waqar, Bano Nahida, van Latum late J.C., and Khan Mushtaq
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Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole combination/administration and dosage ,Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole combination/therapeutic use ,Pneumonia, Bacterial/drug therapy ,Treatment failure ,Child ,Randomized controlled trials ,Multicenter studies ,Pakistan ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Increasing concern over bacterial resistance to cotrimoxazole, which is recommended by WHO as a first-line drug for treating non-severe pneumonia, led to the suggestion that this might not be optimal therapy. However, changing to alternative antimicrobial agents, such as amoxicillin, is costly. We compared the clinical efficacy of twice-daily cotrimoxazole in standard versus double dosage for treating non-severe pneumonia in children. METHODS: A randomized controlled multicentre trial was implemented in seven hospital outpatient departments and two community health programmes. A total of 1143 children aged 2-59 months with non-severe pneumonia were randomly allocated to receive 4 mg trimethoprim plus 20 mg sulfamethoxazole/kg of body weight or 8 mg trimethoprim plus 40 mg sulfamethoxazole/kg of body weight orally twice-daily for 5 days Treatment failure occurred when a child required a change of therapy, died or was lost to follow-up. Children required a change of therapy if their condition worsened (they developed chest indrawing or danger signs) or if at 48 hours after enrolment, their clinical condition was the same (defined as having a respiratory rate that was 5 breaths/minute higher or lower than at the time of enrolment). FINDINGS: The results of 1134 children were analysed: 578 were assigned to the standard dose of cotrimoxazole and 556 to the double dose. Treatment failed in 112 children (19.4%) in the standard group and 118 (21.2%) in the double-dose group (relative risk 1.10; 95% confidence interval = 0.87-1.37). Using multivariate analysis we found that treatment was more likely to fail in children who were not given the medicine correctly (P = 0.001), in those younger than 12 months (P = 0.004), those who had used antibiotics previously (P = 0.002), those whose respiratory rate was > 20 breaths/minute above the age-specific cut-off point (P = 0.006), and those from urban areas (P = 0.042). CONCLUSION: Both standard and double strength cotrimoxazole were equally effective in treating non-severe pneumonia. Close follow-up of patients is essential to prevent worsening of disease. Definitions of clinical failure need to be more specific. Surveillance in both rural and urban areas is essential in the development of treatment policies that are based on clinical outcomes.
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- 2005
15. Global burden of acute lower respiratory infection associated with human metapneumovirus in children under five years for 2018 : a systematic review and modelling study
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Wang, Xin, Li, You, Deloria-Knoll, Maria, Madhi, Shabir A., Cohen, Cheryl, Ali, Asad, Basnet, Sudha, Bassat, Quique, Brooks, W. Abdullah, Chittaganpitch, Malinee, Echavarria, Marcela, Fasce, Rodrigo A., Goswami, Doli, Hirve, Siddhivinayak, Homaira, Nusrat, Howie, Stephen R. C., Kotloff, Karen L., Khuri-Bulos, Najwa, Krishnan, Anand, Lucero, Marilla G., Lupisan, Socorro, Mira-Iglesias, Ainara, Moore, David P., Moraleda, Cinta, Nunes, Marta, Oshitani, Histoshi, Owor, Betty E., Polack, Fernando P., O'Brien, Katherine L., Rasmussen, Zeba A., Rath, Barbara A., Salimi, Vahid, Scott, J Anthony G., Simões, Eric A. F., Strand, Tor A., Thea, Donald M., Treurnicht, Florette K., Vaccari, Linda C., Yoshida, Lay-Myint, Zar, Heather J., Campbell, Harry, Nair, Harish, Respiratory Virus Global Epidemiology Network, and Nokes, D. James
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viruses ,virus diseases ,respiratory tract diseases - Abstract
Summary:\ud Human metapneumovirus (hMPV) is one of several important viruses associated with childhood acute lower respiratory infection (ALRI). However, there are currently no global burden estimates for ALRI associated with hMPV in children, and there are no licenced vaccines or drugs for hMPV infections. We estimated age–stratified global morbidity and mortality burden of hMPV–associated ALRI among children under five years using data on laboratory–confirmed hMPV burden from different geographic regions. \ud Methods: We performed a systematic review of hMPV burden studies published between 1 January 2001 and 31 December 2019 and identified a further 40 high–quality unpublished studies. We assessed the risk of bias using a modified Newcastle–Ottawa Scale. Incidence rates, hospital admission rates, and in–hospital case–fatality ratios (hCFRs) of hMPV–associated ALRI (defined as ALRI with laboratory–confirmed hMPV) were analysed using a generalized linear mixed model. We applied incidence and hospital admission rates of hMPV–associated ALRI to population estimates to yield the morbidity burden estimates. We estimated hMPV–associated ALRI in–hospital deaths by combining hospital admissions and hCFRs of hMPV–associated ALRI. We estimated the overall hMPV–associated ALRI deaths (both in–hospital and out–hospital deaths) using the number of in–hospital deaths, population–based childhood pneumonia mortality, and care–seeking for child pneumonia. We also estimated hMPV–attributable ALRI cases, hospital admissions, and deaths (ALRI burden that are causally attributable to hMPV) by combining hMPV–associated burden estimates and attributable fractions of hMPV in laboratory–confirmed hMPV cases and deaths. \ud Findings: We estimated in 2018 that hMPV could be detected in 14.2 million (UR 10.2–20.1) ALRI cases, 643,000 (UR 425,000–977,000) hospital admissions, 7,700 (UR 2,600–48,800) in–hospital deaths, and 16,100 (UR 5,700–88,000) overall ALRI deaths among children under five years globally. Of these cases and deaths, an estimated 11.1 million (UR 8.0–15.7) ALRI cases, 502,000 (UR 332,000–762,000) ALRI hospital admissions, and 11,300 (UR 4,000–61,600) ALRI deaths could be causally attributable to hMPV. hMPV–associated ALRI incidence rate in the community setting did not vary much by age strata, while about 58% of hospital admissions were in infants less than 12 months; 64% of in–hospital deaths occurred 6 in the first six months of life, of which 80% occurred in low– and lower–middle income countries. \ud Interpretation: Infants younger than one year have disproportionately high risks of severe hMPV infections across settings, similar to respiratory syncytial virus and influenza virus. Infants younger than 6 months in low– and lower–middle income countries are at greater risk of death from hMPV–associated ALRI compared with other countries. Our mortality estimates, though likely to be conservative and underestimate the true hMPV mortality burden, demonstrate the importance of intervention strategies for infants across all settings, and warrant continued efforts to improve the outcome of hMPV–associated ALRI among young infants in low– and lower–middle income countries.
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- 2021
16. Catch-Up Growth Occurs after Diarrhea in Early Childhood
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Richard, Stephanie A., Black, Robert E., Gilman, Robert H., Guerrant, Richard L., Kang, Gagandeep, Lanata, Claudio F., Mølbak, Kåre, Rasmussen, Zeba A., Sack, Bradley R., Valentiner-Branth, Palle, and Checkley, William
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- 2014
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17. Diarrhea in Early Childhood: Short-term Association With Weight and Long-term Association With Length
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Richard, Stephanie A., Black, Robert E., Gilman, Robert H., Guerrant, Richard L., Kang, Gagandeep, Lanata, Claudio F., Mølbak, Kåre, Rasmussen, Zeba A., Sack, R. Bradley, Valentiner-Branth, Palle, and Checkley, William
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- 2013
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18. Causal Pathways from Enteropathogens to Environmental Enteropathy: Findings from the MAL-ED Birth Cohort Study
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Kosek, Margaret, Ahmed, Tahmeed, Bhutta, Zulfiquar, Caulfield, Laura, Guerrant, Richard, Houpt, Eric, Kang, Gagandeep, Lee, Gwenyth, Lima, Aldo, McCormick, Benjamin J.J., Platts-Mills, James, Seidman, Jessica, Blank, Rebecca R., Gottlieb, Michael, Knobler, Stacey L., Lang, Dennis R., Miller, Mark A., Tountas, Karen H., Bhutta, Zulfiqar A., Checkley, William, Guerrant, Richard L., Kosek, Margaret N., Mason, Carl J., Murray-Kolb, Laura E., Petri Jr., William A., Seidman, Jessica C., Bessong, Pascal, Haque, Rashidul, John, Sushil, Lima, Aldo A.M., Mduma, Estomih R., Oriá, Reinaldo B., Shrestha, Prakash Sunder, Shrestha, Sanjaya Kumar, Svensen, Erling, Zaidi, Anita K.M., Abreu, Cláudia B., Acosta, Angel Mendez, Ahmed, Imran, Shamsir Ahmed, A.M., Ali, Asad, Ambikapathi, Ramya, Barrett, Leah, Bauck, Aubrey, Bayyo, Eliwaza, Bodhidatta, Ladaporn, Bose, Anuradha, Daniel Carreon, J., Chandyo, Ram Krishna, Charu, Vivek, Costa, Hilda, Dillingham, Rebecca, Di Moura, Alessandra, Doan, Viyada, Filho, Jose Quirino, Graham, Jhanelle, Hoest, Christel, Hossain, Iqbal, Islam, Munirul, Steffi Jennifer, M., Kaki, Shiny, Koshy, Beena, Leite, Álvaro M., Lima, Noélia L., Maciel, Bruna L.L., Mahfuz, Mustafa, Mahopo, Cloupas, Maphula, Angelina, McGrath, Monica, Mohale, Archana, Moraes, Milena, Mota, Francisco S., Muliyil, Jayaprakash, Mvungi, Regisiana, Nayyar, Gaurvika, Nyathi, Emanuel, Olortegui, Maribel Paredes, Oria, Reinaldo, Vasquez, Angel Orbe, Pan, William K., Pascal, John, Patil, Crystal L., Pendergast, Laura, Pinedo, Silvia Rengifo, Psaki, Stephanie, Raghava, Mohan Venkata, Ramanujam, Karthikeyan, Rasheed, Muneera, Rasmussen, Zeba A., Richard, Stephanie A., Rose, Anuradha, Roshan, Reeba, Schaefer, Barbara, Scharf, Rebecca, Sharma, Srujan L., Shrestha, Binob, Shrestha, Rita, Simons, Suzanne, Soares, Alberto M., Mota, Rosa M.S., Soofi, Sajid, Strand, Tor, Tofail, Fahmida, Thomas, Rahul J., Turab, Ali, Ulak, Manjeswori, Wang, Vivian, Yarrot, Ladislaus, Yori, Pablo Peñataro, Alam, Didar, Amour, Caroline, Chavez, Cesar Banda, Babji, Sudhir, de Burga, Rosa Rios, Flores, Julian Torres, Gratz, Jean, George, Ajila T., Hariraju, Dinesh, Havt, Alexandre, Karunakaran, Priyadarshani, Lazarus, Robin P., Lima, Ila F., Mondal, Dinesh, Medeiros, Pedro H.Q.S., Nshama, Rosemary, Quetz, Josiane, Qureshi, Shahida, Raju, Sophy, Ramachandran, Anup, Ramadas, Rakhi, Catharine Ross, A., Salas, Mery Siguas, Samie, Amidou, Schulze, Kerry, Shanmuga Sundaram, E., Swema, Buliga Mujaga, and Trigoso, Dixner Rengifo
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Child health ,Stunting ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Child growth ,lcsh:R ,lcsh:Medicine ,Undernutrition ,Enteropathogen ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,Enteropathy - Abstract
Background: Environmental enteropathy (EE), the adverse impact of frequent and numerous enteric infections on the gut resulting in a state of persistent immune activation and altered permeability, has been proposed as a key determinant of growth failure in children in low- and middle-income populations. A theory-driven systems model to critically evaluate pathways through which enteropathogens, gut permeability, and intestinal and systemic inflammation affect child growth was conducted within the framework of the Etiology, Risk Factors and Interactions of Enteric Infections and Malnutrition and the Consequences for Child Health and Development (MAL-ED) birth cohort study that included children from eight countries. Methods: Non-diarrheal stool samples (N = 22,846) from 1253 children from multiple sites were evaluated for a panel of 40 enteropathogens and fecal concentrations of myeloperoxidase, alpha-1-antitrypsin, and neopterin. Among these same children, urinary lactulose:mannitol (L:M) (N = 6363) and plasma alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) (N = 2797) were also measured. The temporal sampling design was used to create a directed acyclic graph of proposed mechanistic pathways between enteropathogen detection in non-diarrheal stools, biomarkers of intestinal permeability and inflammation, systemic inflammation and change in length- and weight- for age in children 0–2 years of age. Findings: Children in these populations had frequent enteric infections and high levels of both intestinal and systemic inflammation. Higher burdens of enteropathogens, especially those categorized as being enteroinvasive or causing mucosal disruption, were associated with elevated biomarker concentrations of gut and systemic inflammation and, via these associations, indirectly associated with both reduced linear and ponderal growth. Evidence for the association with reduced linear growth was stronger for systemic inflammation than for gut inflammation; the opposite was true of reduced ponderal growth. Although Giardia was associated with reduced growth, the association was not mediated by any of the biomarkers evaluated. Interpretation: The large quantity of empirical evidence contributing to this analysis supports the conceptual model of EE. The effects of EE on growth faltering in young children were small, but multiple mechanistic pathways underlying the attribution of growth failure to asymptomatic enteric infections had statistical support in the analysis. The strongest evidence for EE was the association between enteropathogens and linear growth mediated through systemic inflammation. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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- 2017
19. Determinants of vaccine coverage and timeliness in a northern Pakistani village.
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Jamison, Alexandra F., McCormick, Benjamin J. J., Hussain, Ejaz, Thomas, Elizabeth D., Azam, Syed Iqbal, Hansen, Chelsea L., and Rasmussen, Zeba A.
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VACCINATION coverage ,VACCINATION of children ,VACCINATION status ,POISSON regression ,MEASLES vaccines ,POLIO - Abstract
The incidence of vaccine preventable disease in Pakistan remains high despite a long-standing Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI). We describe vaccine completeness, timeliness and determinants of coverage from a remote rural cohort (2012–2014). Vaccination histories were taken from EPI records. Vaccination was complete if all doses were received according to the EPI schedule and timely if doses were not ≥3 days early or ≥ 28 days late. Three models are presented: a multivariable logistic regression of household demographic and socioeconomic factors associated with complete vaccination, a multivariable mixed effects logistic regression assessing whether or not the vaccine was administered late (versus on-time), and a mixed effects multivariable Poisson regression model analysing the interval (in days) between vaccine doses. Of 959 enrolled children with full vaccination histories, 88.2 and 65.1% were fully vaccinated following either the pentavalent or DPT/HBV schedules if measles was excluded; coverage dropped to 50.0 and 27.1% when both doses of measles were included. Sixty-four (6.7%) were unvaccinated. Coverage and timeliness declined with subsequent doses. Migrating into the village after 1995 (95%CI 1.88 to 5.17) was associated with late vaccination. Being male, having an older father, and having parents with at least some formal education reduced the likelihood of a late dose. The interval between doses was consistent at 5 weeks (compared with the 4 weeks recommended by EPI). None of the socio-demographic variables were related to the likelihood of receiving full coverage. Vaccine coverage in Oshikhandass was higher than national averages. Measles vaccine coverage and timeliness were low; special consideration should be paid to this vaccine. The local vaccination schedule differed from the EPI, but the consistency suggests good local administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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20. Evolutionary history and introduction of SARS-CoV-2 Alpha VOC/B.1.1.7 in Pakistan through international travelers.
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Nasir, Asghar, Bukhari, Ali Raza, Trovão, Nídia S, Thielen, Peter M, Kanji, Akbar, Mahmood, Syed Faisal, Ghanchi, Najia Karim, Ansar, Zeeshan, Merritt, Brian, Mehoke, Thomas, Razzak, Safina Abdul, Syed, Muhammed Asif, Shaikh, Suhail Raza, Wassan, Mansoor, Aamir, Uzma Bashir, Baele, Guy, Rasmussen, Zeba, Spiro, David, Hasan, Rumina, and Hasan, Zahra
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TRAVEL hygiene ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants continue to emerge, and their identification is important for the public health response to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Genomic sequencing provides robust information but may not always be accessible, and therefore, mutation-based polymerase chain reaction (PCR) approaches can be used for rapid identification of known variants. International travelers arriving in Karachi between December 2020 and February 2021 were tested for SARS-CoV-2 by PCR. A subset of positive samples was tested for S-gene target failure (SGTF) on TaqPathTM COVID-19 (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and for mutations using the GSD NovaType SARS-CoV-2 (Eurofins Technologies) assays. Sequencing was conducted on the MinION platform (Oxford Nanopore Technologies). Bayesian phylogeographic inference was performed integrating the patients' travel history information. Of the thirty-five COVID-19 cases screened, thirteen had isolates with SGTF. The travelers transmitted infection to sixty-eight contact cases. The B.1.1.7 lineage was confirmed through sequencing and PCR. The phylogenetic analysis of sequence data available for six cases included four B.1.1.7 strains and one B.1.36 and B.1.1.212 lineage isolate. Phylogeographic modeling estimated at least three independent B.1.1.7 introductions into Karachi, Pakistan, originating from the UK. B.1.1.212 and B.1.36 were inferred to be introduced either from the UK or the travelers' layover location. We report the introduction of SARS-CoV-2 B.1.1.7 and other lineages in Pakistan by international travelers arriving via different flight routes. This highlights SARS-CoV-2 transmission through travel, importance of testing, and quarantine post-travel to prevent transmission of new strains, as well as recording detailed patients' metadata. Such results help inform policies on restricting travel from destinations where new highly transmissible variants have emerged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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21. Early life child micronutrient status, maternal reasoning, and a nurturing household environment have persistent influences on child cognitive development at age 5 years: results from MAL-ED
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McCormick, Benjamin J.J., Richard, Stephanie A., Caulfield, Laura E., Pendergast, Laura L., Seidman, Jessica C., Koshy, Beena, Roshan, Reeba, Shrestha, Rita, Svensen, Erling, Blacy, Ladislaus, Rasmussen, Zeba, Maphula, Angelina, Scharf, Rebecca, Nahar, Baitun, Haque, Sayma, Rasheed, Muneera, Oria, Reinaldo, Rogawski, Elizabeth T., and Murray-Kolb, Laura E.
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Diarrhea ,Eating ,Ingestão de Alimentos ,Micronutrients ,Micronutrientes ,Diarreia - Abstract
Background: Child cognitive development is influenced by early-life insults and protective factors. To what extent these factors have a long-term legacy on child development and hence fulfillment of cognitive potential is unknown. Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the relation between early-life factors (birth to 2 y) and cognitive development at 5 y. Methods: Observational follow-up visits were made of children at 5 y, previously enrolled in the community-based MAL-ED longitudinal cohort. The burden of enteropathogens, prevalence of illness, complementary diet intake, micronutrient status, and household and maternal factors from birth to 2 y were extensively measured and their relation with the Wechsler Preschool Primary Scales of Intelligence at 5 y was examined through use of linear regression. Results: Cognitive T-scores from 813 of 1198 (68%) children were examined and 5 variables had significant associations in multivariable models: mean child plasma transferrin receptor concentration (β: −1.81, 95% CI: −2.75, −0.86), number of years of maternal education (β: 0.27, 95% CI: 0.08, 0.45), maternal cognitive reasoning score (β: 0.09, 95% CI: 0.03, 0.15), household assets score (β: 0.64, 95% CI: 0.24, 1.04), and HOME child cleanliness factor (β: 0.60, 95% CI: 0.05, 1.15). In multivariable models, the mean rate of enteropathogen detections, burden of illness, and complementary food intakes between birth and 2 y were not significantly related to 5-y cognition. Conclusions: A nurturing home context in terms of a healthy/clean environment and household wealth, provision of adequate micronutrients, maternal education, and cognitive reasoning have a strong and persistent influence on child cognitive development. Efforts addressing aspects of poverty around micronutrient status, nurturing caregiving, and enabling home environments are likely to have lasting positive impacts on child cognitive development. publishedVersion
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- 2019
22. Epidemiology and Impact of Campylobacter Infection in Children in 8 Low-Resource Settings: Results From the MAL-ED Study
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Amour, Caroline, Gratz, Jean, Mduma, Estomih, Svensen, Erling, Rogawski, Elizabeth T., McGrath, Monica, Seidman, Jessica C., McCormick, Benjamin J. J., Shrestha, Sanjaya, Samie, Amidou, Mahfuz, Mustafa, Qureshi, Shahida, Hotwani, Aneeta, Babji, Sudhir, Trigoso, Dixner Rengifo, Lima, Aldo A. M., Bodhidatta, Ladaporn, Bessong, Pascal, Ahmed, Tahmeed, Shakoor, Sadia, Kang, Gagandeep, Kosek, Margaret, Guerrant, Richard L., Lang, Dennis, Gottlieb, Michael, Houpt, Eric R., Platts-Mills, James A., Acosta, Angel Mendez, de Burga, Rosa Rios, Chavez, Cesar Banda, Flores, Julian Torres, Olotegui, Maribel Paredes, Pinedo, Silvia Rengifo, Salas, Mery Siguas, Vasquez, Angel Orbe, Ahmed, Imran, Alam, Didar, Ali, Asad, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A., Rasheed, Muneera, Soofi, Sajid, Turab, Ali, Zaidi, Anita K.M., Mason, Carl J., Bose, Anuradha, George, Ajila T., Hariraju, Dinesh, Jennifer, M. Steffi, John, Sushil, Kaki, Shiny, Karunakaran, Priyadarshani, Koshy, Beena, Lazarus, Robin P., Muliyil, Jayaprakash, Raghava, Mohan Venkata, Raju, Sophy, Ramachandran, Anup, Ramadas, Rakhi, Ramanujam, Karthikeyan, Rose, Anuradha, Roshan, Reeba, Sharma, Srujan L., Sundaram, Shanmuga, Thomas, Rahul J., Pan, William K., Ambikapathi, Ramya, Carreon, J. Daniel, Charu, Vivek, Doan, Viyada, Graham, Jhanelle, Hoest, Christel, Knobler, Stacey, Lang, Dennis R., McCormick, Benjamin J.J., Miller, Mark A., Mohale, Archana, Nayyar, Gaurvika, Psaki, Stephanie, Rasmussen, Zeba, Richard, Stephanie A., Wang, Vivian, Blank, Rebecca, Tountas, Karen H., Bayyo, Eliwaza, Mduma, Estomih R., Mvungi, Regisiana, Nshama, Rosemary, Pascal, John, Swema, Buliga Mujaga, Yarrot, Ladislaus, Ahmed, A.M. Shamsir, Haque, Rashidul, Hossain, Iqbal, Islam, Munirul, Mondal, Dinesh, Tofail, Fahmida, Chandyo, Ram Krishna, Shrestha, Prakash Sunder, Shrestha, Rita, Ulak, Manjeswori, Bauck, Aubrey, Black, Robert, Caulfield, Laura, Checkley, William, Kosek, Margaret N., Lee, Gwenyth, Schulze, Kerry, Yori, Pablo Peñataro, Murray-Kolb, Laura E., Ross, A. Catharine, Schaefer, Barbara, Simons, Suzanne, Pendergast, Laura, Abreu, Cláudia B., Costa, Hilda, Di Moura, Alessandra, Filho, José Quirino, Havt, Alexandre, Leite, Álvaro M., Lima, Aldo A.M., Lima, Noélia L., Lima, Ila F., Maciel, Bruna L.L., Medeiros, Pedro H.Q.S., Moraes, Milena, Mota, Francisco S., Oriá, Reinaldo B., Quetz, Josiane, Soares, Alberto M., Mota, Rosa M.S., Patil, Crystal L., Mahopo, Cloupas, Maphula, Angelina, Nyathi, Emanuel, Barrett, Leah, Dillingham, Rebecca, Houpt, Eric, Petri, William A., Platts-Mills, James, Scharf, Rebecca, Shrestha, Binob, Shrestha, Sanjaya Kumar, and Strand, Tor
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Diarrhea ,Male ,growth ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Campylobacter ,Gastroenteritis ,Cohort Studies ,Editor's Choice ,Child Development ,children ,Cost of Illness ,inflammation ,Risk Factors ,Campylobacter Infections ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Articles and Commentaries ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
In a multisite birth cohort study, we document a high burden of Campylobacter infection using enzyme immunoassay, demonstrate an association between Campylobacter and linear growth shortfalls and both increased intestinal permeability and intestinal and systemic inflammation, and identify potential interventions., Background. Enteropathogen infections have been associated with enteric dysfunction and impaired growth in children in low-resource settings. In a multisite birth cohort study (MAL-ED), we describe the epidemiology and impact of Campylobacter infection in the first 2 years of life. Methods. Children were actively followed up until 24 months of age. Diarrheal and nondiarrheal stool samples were collected and tested by enzyme immunoassay for Campylobacter. Stool and blood samples were assayed for markers of intestinal permeability and inflammation. Results. A total of 1892 children had 7601 diarrheal and 26 267 nondiarrheal stool samples tested for Campylobacter. We describe a high prevalence of infection, with most children (n = 1606; 84.9%) having a Campylobacter-positive stool sample by 1 year of age. Factors associated with a reduced risk of Campylobacter detection included exclusive breastfeeding (risk ratio, 0.57; 95% confidence interval, .47–.67), treatment of drinking water (0.76; 0.70–0.83), access to an improved latrine (0.89; 0.82–0.97), and recent macrolide antibiotic use (0.68; 0.63–0.74). A high Campylobacter burden was associated with a lower length-for-age Z score at 24 months (−1.82; 95% confidence interval, −1.94 to −1.70) compared with a low burden (−1.49; −1.60 to −1.38). This association was robust to confounders and consistent across sites. Campylobacter infection was also associated with increased intestinal permeability and intestinal and systemic inflammation. Conclusions. Campylobacter was prevalent across diverse settings and associated with growth shortfalls. Promotion of exclusive breastfeeding, drinking water treatment, improved latrines, and targeted antibiotic treatment may reduce the burden of Campylobacter infection and improve growth in children in these settings.
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- 2016
23. Measles Outbreak in a Northern Pakistani Village: Epidemiology and Vaccine Effectiveness
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Murray, Megan and Rasmussen, Zeba
- Published
- 2000
24. Early Life Experiences and Trajectories of Cognitive Development.
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McCormick, Benjamin J. J., Caulfield, Laura E., Richard, Stephanie A., Pendergast, Laura, Seidman, Jessica C., Maphula, Angelina, Koshy, Beena, Blacy, Ladislaus, Roshan, Reeba, Nahar, Baitun, Shrestha, Rita, Rasheed, Muneera, Svensen, Erling, Rasmussen, Zeba, Scharf, Rebecca J., Haque, Sayma, Oria, Reinaldo, and Murray-Kolb, Laura E.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Early Life Child Micronutrient Status, Maternal Reasoning, and a Nurturing Household Environment have Persistent Influences on Child Cognitive Development at Age 5 years: Results from MAL-ED.
- Author
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McCormick, Benjamin J J, Richard, Stephanie A, Caulfield, Laura E, Pendergast, Laura L, Seidman, Jessica C, Koshy, Beena, Roshan, Reeba, Shrestha, Rita, Svensen, Erling, Blacy, Ladislaus, Rasmussen, Zeba, Maphula, Angelina, Scharf, Rebecca, Nahar, Baitun, Haque, Sayma, Rasheed, Muneera, Oria, Reinaldo, Rogawski, Elizabeth T, Murray-Kolb, Laura E, and Acosta, Angel Mendez
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REASONING in children ,COGNITION in children ,COGNITIVE development ,MICRONUTRIENTS ,CHILD development ,HOUSEHOLDS ,FOOD combining ,TRANSFERRIN receptors - Abstract
Background: Child cognitive development is influenced by early-life insults and protective factors. To what extent these factors have a long-term legacy on child development and hence fulfillment of cognitive potential is unknown.Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the relation between early-life factors (birth to 2 y) and cognitive development at 5 y.Methods: Observational follow-up visits were made of children at 5 y, previously enrolled in the community-based MAL-ED longitudinal cohort. The burden of enteropathogens, prevalence of illness, complementary diet intake, micronutrient status, and household and maternal factors from birth to 2 y were extensively measured and their relation with the Wechsler Preschool Primary Scales of Intelligence at 5 y was examined through use of linear regression.Results: Cognitive T-scores from 813 of 1198 (68%) children were examined and 5 variables had significant associations in multivariable models: mean child plasma transferrin receptor concentration (β: -1.81, 95% CI: -2.75, -0.86), number of years of maternal education (β: 0.27, 95% CI: 0.08, 0.45), maternal cognitive reasoning score (β: 0.09, 95% CI: 0.03, 0.15), household assets score (β: 0.64, 95% CI: 0.24, 1.04), and HOME child cleanliness factor (β: 0.60, 95% CI: 0.05, 1.15). In multivariable models, the mean rate of enteropathogen detections, burden of illness, and complementary food intakes between birth and 2 y were not significantly related to 5-y cognition.Conclusions: A nurturing home context in terms of a healthy/clean environment and household wealth, provision of adequate micronutrients, maternal education, and cognitive reasoning have a strong and persistent influence on child cognitive development. Efforts addressing aspects of poverty around micronutrient status, nurturing caregiving, and enabling home environments are likely to have lasting positive impacts on child cognitive development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Relationships among Common Illness Symptoms and the Protective Effect of Breastfeeding in Early Childhood in MAL-ED: An Eight-Country Cohort Study.
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Richard, Stephanie A., McCormick, Benjamin J. J., Seidman, Jessica C., Rasmussen, Zeba, Kosek, Margaret N., Rogawski, Elizabeth T., Petri, William, Bose, Anuradha, Mduma, Estomih, Maciel, Bruna L. L., Chandyo, Ram Krishna, Bhutta, Zulfiqar, Turab, Ali, Bessong, Pascal, Mahfuz, Mustafa, and Caulfield, Laura E.
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- 2018
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27. Wasting Is Associated with Stunting in Early Childhood123
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Richard, Stephanie A., Black, Robert E., Gilman, Robert H., Guerrant, Richard L., Kang, Gagandeep, Lanata, Claudio F., Mølbak, Kåre, Rasmussen, Zeba A., Sack, R. Bradley, Valentiner-Branth, Palle, and Checkley, William
- Subjects
Male ,Anthropometry ,Wasting Syndrome ,Body Weight ,Infant ,Growth ,Body Height ,Child, Preschool ,Nutritional Epidemiology ,Humans ,Female ,Longitudinal Studies ,Developing Countries ,Growth Disorders - Abstract
The longitudinal relationship between stunting and wasting in children is poorly characterized. Instances of wasting or poor weight gain may precede linear growth retardation. We analyzed longitudinal anthropometric data for 1599 children from 8 cohort studies to determine the effect of wasting [weight-for-length Z-score (WLZ) < −2] and variability in WLZ in the first 17 mo on length-for-age Z-score (LAZ) at 18–24 mo of age. In addition, we considered the effects of change in WLZ during the previous 6-mo period on length at 18 and 24 mo. Wasting at 6–11 or 12–17 mo was associated with decreased LAZ; however, children who experienced wasting only at 0–5 mo did not suffer any long-term growth deficits compared with children with no wasting during any period. Children with greater WLZ variability (≥0.5 SD) in the first 17 mo of life were shorter [LAZ = −0.51 SD (95% CI: −0.67, −0.36 SD)] at 18–24 mo of age than children with WLZ variability
- Published
- 2012
28. Measles Outbreak in a Northern Pakistani Village: Epidemiology and Vaccine Effectiveness.
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Murray, Megan and Rasmussen, Zeba
- Subjects
- *
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *MEASLES , *DISEASE incidence , *MEASLES vaccines , *DRUG efficacy - Abstract
In the spring of 1990, local community health workers reported a measles outbreak in several partially vaccinated villages in the Punial Valley in northern Pakistan. The authors conducted an investigation in one of these villages to assess vaccine coverage and vaccine efficacy and to describe the patterns of measles outbreaks that prevailed in this community. The results of a survey of the entire village revealed two major gaps in vaccine coverage: the small minority Sunni community and children over 3 years of age. Vaccine efficacy was estimated to range from 73 to 90% but was markedly reduced in children who were vaccinated under 12 months of age. The occurrence of an outbreak in a community in which a relatively new vaccination program is primarily directed at younger children has been predicted by theoretical models of measles dynamics and is consistent with the experience of other vaccination programs in the developing world. These observations suggest that, in some areas of the developing world, the age groups targeted to receive measles vaccinations may need to be broadened to ensure adequate coverage to prevent recurrent outbreaks. Am J Epidemiol 2000; 151:811–19. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2009
29. Measles Outbreak in a Northern Pakistani Village: Epidemiology and Vaccine Effectiveness.
- Author
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Murray, Megan and Rasmussen, Zeba
- Published
- 1984
30. The MAL-ED Cohort Study: Methods and Lessons Learned When Assessing Early Child Development and Caregiving Mediators in Infants and Young Children in 8 Low- and Middle-Income Countries.
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Murray-Kolb, Laura E., Rasmussen, Zeba A., Scharf, Rebecca J., Rasheed, Muneera A., Svensen, Erling, Seidman, Jessica C., Tofail, Fahmida, Koshy, Beena, Shrestha, Rita, Maphula, Angelina, Vasquez, Angel Orbe, da Costa, Hilda P., Yousafzai, Aisha K., Oria, Reinaldo B., Roshan, Reeba, Bayyo, Eliwasa B., Kosek, Margaret, Shrestha, Sanjaya, Schaefer, Barbara A., and Bessong, Pascal
- Subjects
- *
CHILD development , *CHILD psychology , *JUVENILE diseases , *ETIOLOGY of diseases , *MALNUTRITION , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
More epidemiological data are needed on risk and protective factors for child development. In The Etiology, Risk Factors and Interactions of Enteric Infections and Malnutrition and the Consequences for Child Health and Development (MAL-ED) cohort study, we assessed child development in a harmonious manner across 8 sites in Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Peru, South Africa, and Tanzania. From birth to 24 months, development and language acquisition were assessed via the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development and a modified MacArthur Communicative Development Inventory. Other measures were infant temperament, the child's environment, maternal psychological adjustment, and maternal reasoning abilities. We developed standard operating procedures and used multiple techniques to ensure appropriate adaptation and quality assurance across the sites. Test adaptation required significant time and human resources but is essential for data quality; funders should support this step in future studies. At the end of this study, we will have a portfolio of culturally adapted instruments for child development studies with examination of psychometric properties of each tool used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
31. Learning from disasters to save lives every day in Pakistan.
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Rasmussen, Bruce, Allen, Sheldon, Rasmussen, Zeba A., and Bajwa, Rashid
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- *
POLITICAL stability , *SOCIAL conflict , *NATURAL disasters , *PUBLIC health , *EMERGENCY management , *TWENTY-first century ,PAKISTANI politics & government - Abstract
The authors discuss the developments in Pakistan, particularly the challenges confronted by the government and its people, including political instability, conflict, and natural disasters. They claim that the major public health and humanitarian crisis confronting the country is child survival. Among the moves by the government to resolve the issues is the establishment of a national disaster management system.
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- 2013
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32. Assembling a global database of child pneumonia studies to inform WHO pneumonia management algorithm: Methodology and applications.
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Martin H, Falconer J, Addo-Yobo E, Aneja S, Arroyo LM, Asghar R, Awasthi S, Banajeh S, Bari A, Basnet S, Bavdekar A, Bhandari N, Bhatnagar S, Bhutta ZA, Brooks A, Chadha M, Chisaka N, Chou M, Clara AW, Colbourn T, Cutland C, D'Acremont V, Echavarria M, Gentile A, Gessner B, Gregory CJ, Hazir T, Hibberd PL, Hirve S, Hooli S, Iqbal I, Jeena P, Kartasasmita CB, King C, Libster R, Lodha R, Lozano JM, Lucero M, Lufesi N, MacLeod WB, Madhi SA, Mathew JL, Maulen-Radovan I, McCollum ED, Mino G, Mwansambo C, Neuman MI, Nguyen NTV, Nunes MC, Nymadawa P, O'Grady KF, Pape JW, Paranhos-Baccala G, Patel A, Picot VS, Rakoto-Andrianarivelo M, Rasmussen Z, Rouzier V, Russomando G, Ruvinsky RO, Sadruddin S, Saha SK, Santosham M, Singhi S, Soofi S, Strand TA, Sylla M, Thamthitiwat S, Thea DM, Turner C, Vanhems P, Wadhwa N, Wang J, Zaman SM, Campbell H, Nair H, Qazi SA, and Nisar YB
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- Male, Child, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Child, Preschool, Female, Case Management, World Health Organization, Algorithms, Research, Pneumonia drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: The existing World Health Organization (WHO) pneumonia case management guidelines rely on clinical symptoms and signs for identifying, classifying, and treating pneumonia in children up to 5 years old. We aimed to collate an individual patient-level data set from large, high-quality pre-existing studies on pneumonia in children to identify a set of signs and symptoms with greater validity in the diagnosis, prognosis, and possible treatment of childhood pneumonia for the improvement of current pneumonia case management guidelines., Methods: Using data from a published systematic review and expert knowledge, we identified studies meeting our eligibility criteria and invited investigators to share individual-level patient data. We collected data on demographic information, general medical history, and current illness episode, including history, clinical presentation, chest radiograph findings when available, treatment, and outcome. Data were gathered separately from hospital-based and community-based cases. We performed a narrative synthesis to describe the final data set., Results: Forty-one separate data sets were included in the Pneumonia Research Partnership to Assess WHO Recommendations (PREPARE) database, 26 of which were hospital-based and 15 were community-based. The PREPARE database includes 285 839 children with pneumonia (244 323 in the hospital and 41 516 in the community), with detailed descriptions of clinical presentation, clinical progression, and outcome. Of 9185 pneumonia-related deaths, 6836 (74%) occurred in children <1 year of age and 1317 (14%) in children aged 1-2 years. Of the 285 839 episodes, 280 998 occurred in children 0-59 months old, of which 129 584 (46%) were 2-11 months of age and 152 730 (54%) were males., Conclusions: This data set could identify an improved specific, sensitive set of criteria for diagnosing clinical pneumonia and help identify sick children in need of referral to a higher level of care or a change of therapy. Field studies could be designed based on insights from PREPARE analyses to validate a potential revised pneumonia algorithm. The PREPARE methodology can also act as a model for disease database assembly., Competing Interests: Disclosure of interest: The authors completed the ICMJE Disclosure of Interest Form (available upon request from the corresponding author) and declare the following activities and relationships: YBN is staff member of the World Health Organization., (Copyright © 2022 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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33. Global burden of acute lower respiratory infection associated with human metapneumovirus in children under 5 years in 2018: a systematic review and modelling study.
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Wang X, Li Y, Deloria-Knoll M, Madhi SA, Cohen C, Ali A, Basnet S, Bassat Q, Brooks WA, Chittaganpitch M, Echavarria M, Fasce RA, Goswami D, Hirve S, Homaira N, Howie SRC, Kotloff KL, Khuri-Bulos N, Krishnan A, Lucero MG, Lupisan S, Mira-Iglesias A, Moore DP, Moraleda C, Nunes M, Oshitani H, Owor BE, Polack FP, O'Brien KL, Rasmussen ZA, Rath BA, Salimi V, Scott JAG, Simões EAF, Strand TA, Thea DM, Treurnicht FK, Vaccari LC, Yoshida LM, Zar HJ, Campbell H, and Nair H
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Linear Models, Male, Metapneumovirus, Cost of Illness, Global Health statistics & numerical data, Paramyxoviridae Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Human metapneumovirus is a common virus associated with acute lower respiratory infections (ALRIs) in children. No global burden estimates are available for ALRIs associated with human metapneumovirus in children, and no licensed vaccines or drugs exist for human metapneumovirus infections. We aimed to estimate the age-stratified human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI global incidence, hospital admissions, and mortality burden in children younger than 5 years., Methods: We estimated the global burden of human metapneumovirus-associated ALRIs in children younger than 5 years from a systematic review of 119 studies published between Jan 1, 2001, and Dec 31, 2019, and a further 40 high quality unpublished studies. We assessed risk of bias using a modified Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. We estimated incidence, hospital admission rates, and in-hospital case-fatality ratios (hCFRs) of human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI using a generalised linear mixed model. We applied incidence and hospital admission rates of human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI to population estimates to yield the morbidity burden estimates by age bands and World Bank income levels. We also estimated human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI in-hospital deaths and overall human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI deaths (both in-hospital and non-hospital deaths). Additionally, we estimated human metapneumovirus-attributable ALRI cases, hospital admissions, and deaths by combining human metapneumovirus-associated burden estimates and attributable fractions of human metapneumovirus in laboratory-confirmed human metapneumovirus cases and deaths., Findings: In 2018, among children younger than 5 years globally, there were an estimated 14·2 million human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI cases (uncertainty range [UR] 10·2 million to 20·1 million), 643 000 human metapneumovirus-associated hospital admissions (UR 425 000 to 977 000), 7700 human metapneumovirus-associated in-hospital deaths (2600 to 48 800), and 16 100 overall (hospital and community) human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI deaths (5700 to 88 000). An estimated 11·1 million ALRI cases (UR 8·0 million to 15·7 million), 502 000 ALRI hospital admissions (UR 332 000 to 762 000), and 11 300 ALRI deaths (4000 to 61 600) could be causally attributed to human metapneumovirus in 2018. Around 58% of the hospital admissions were in infants under 12 months, and 64% of in-hospital deaths occurred in infants younger than 6 months, of which 79% occurred in low-income and lower-middle-income countries., Interpretation: Infants younger than 1 year have disproportionately high risks of severe human metapneumovirus infections across all World Bank income regions and all child mortality settings, similar to respiratory syncytial virus and influenza virus. Infants younger than 6 months in low-income and lower-middle-income countries are at greater risk of death from human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI than older children and those in upper-middle-income and high-income countries. Our mortality estimates demonstrate the importance of intervention strategies for infants across all settings, and warrant continued efforts to improve the outcome of human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI among young infants in low-income and lower-middle-income countries., Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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34. Global burden of respiratory infections associated with seasonal influenza in children under 5 years in 2018: a systematic review and modelling study.
- Author
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Wang X, Li Y, O'Brien KL, Madhi SA, Widdowson MA, Byass P, Omer SB, Abbas Q, Ali A, Amu A, Azziz-Baumgartner E, Bassat Q, Abdullah Brooks W, Chaves SS, Chung A, Cohen C, Echavarria M, Fasce RA, Gentile A, Gordon A, Groome M, Heikkinen T, Hirve S, Jara JH, Katz MA, Khuri-Bulos N, Krishnan A, de Leon O, Lucero MG, McCracken JP, Mira-Iglesias A, Moïsi JC, Munywoki PK, Ourohiré M, Polack FP, Rahi M, Rasmussen ZA, Rath BA, Saha SK, Simões EA, Sotomayor V, Thamthitiwat S, Treurnicht FK, Wamukoya M, Yoshida LM, Zar HJ, Campbell H, and Nair H
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Linear Models, Seasons, Global Health statistics & numerical data, Influenza, Human complications, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Seasonal influenza virus is a common cause of acute lower respiratory infection (ALRI) in young children. In 2008, we estimated that 20 million influenza-virus-associated ALRI and 1 million influenza-virus-associated severe ALRI occurred in children under 5 years globally. Despite this substantial burden, only a few low-income and middle-income countries have adopted routine influenza vaccination policies for children and, where present, these have achieved only low or unknown levels of vaccine uptake. Moreover, the influenza burden might have changed due to the emergence and circulation of influenza A/H1N1pdm09. We aimed to incorporate new data to update estimates of the global number of cases, hospital admissions, and mortality from influenza-virus-associated respiratory infections in children under 5 years in 2018., Methods: We estimated the regional and global burden of influenza-associated respiratory infections in children under 5 years from a systematic review of 100 studies published between Jan 1, 1995, and Dec 31, 2018, and a further 57 high-quality unpublished studies. We adapted the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale to assess the risk of bias. We estimated incidence and hospitalisation rates of influenza-virus-associated respiratory infections by severity, case ascertainment, region, and age. We estimated in-hospital deaths from influenza virus ALRI by combining hospital admissions and in-hospital case-fatality ratios of influenza virus ALRI. We estimated the upper bound of influenza virus-associated ALRI deaths based on the number of in-hospital deaths, US paediatric influenza-associated death data, and population-based childhood all-cause pneumonia mortality data in six sites in low-income and lower-middle-income countries., Findings: In 2018, among children under 5 years globally, there were an estimated 109·5 million influenza virus episodes (uncertainty range [UR] 63·1-190·6), 10·1 million influenza-virus-associated ALRI cases (6·8-15·1); 870 000 influenza-virus-associated ALRI hospital admissions (543 000-1 415 000), 15 300 in-hospital deaths (5800-43 800), and up to 34 800 (13 200-97 200) overall influenza-virus-associated ALRI deaths. Influenza virus accounted for 7% of ALRI cases, 5% of ALRI hospital admissions, and 4% of ALRI deaths in children under 5 years. About 23% of the hospital admissions and 36% of the in-hospital deaths were in infants under 6 months. About 82% of the in-hospital deaths occurred in low-income and lower-middle-income countries., Interpretation: A large proportion of the influenza-associated burden occurs among young infants and in low-income and lower middle-income countries. Our findings provide new and important evidence for maternal and paediatric influenza immunisation, and should inform future immunisation policy particularly in low-income and middle-income countries., Funding: WHO; Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation., (Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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35. Risk factors for respiratory syncytial virus associated with acute lower respiratory infection in children under five years: Systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Shi T, Balsells E, Wastnedge E, Singleton R, Rasmussen ZA, Zar HJ, Rath BA, Madhi SA, Campbell S, Vaccari LC, Bulkow LR, Thomas ED, Barnett W, Hoppe C, Campbell H, and Nair H
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Child, Preschool, Developing Countries, Female, Global Health, Hospitalization, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Infant, Low Birth Weight, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Premature, Male, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections mortality, Respiratory Tract Infections mortality, Respiratory Tract Infections virology, Risk Factors, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Syncytial Viruses isolation & purification, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common pathogen identified in young children with acute lower respiratory infection (ALRI) as well as an important cause of hospital admission. The high incidence of RSV infection and its potential severe outcome make it important to identify and prioritise children who are at higher risk of developing RSV-associated ALRI. We aimed to identify risk factors for RSV-associated ALRI in young children., Methods: We carried out a systematic literature review across 4 databases and obtained unpublished studies from RSV Global Epidemiology Network (RSV GEN) collaborators. Quality of all eligible studies was assessed according to modified GRADE criteria. We conducted meta-analyses to estimate odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for individual risk factors., Results: We identified 20 studies (3 were unpublished data) with "good quality" that investigated 18 risk factors for RSV-associated ALRI in children younger than five years old. Among them, 8 risk factors were significantly associated with RSV-associated ALRI. The meta-estimates of their odds ratio (ORs) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI) are prematurity 1.96 (95% CI 1.44-2.67), low birth weight 1.91 (95% CI 1.45-2.53), being male 1.23 (95% CI 1.13-1.33), having siblings 1.60 (95% CI 1.32-1.95), maternal smoking 1.36 (95% CI 1.24-1.50), history of atopy 1.47 (95% CI 1.16-1.87), no breastfeeding 2.24 (95% CI 1.56-3.20) and crowding 1.94 (95% CI 1.29-2.93). Although there were insufficient studies available to generate a meta-estimate for HIV, all articles (irrespective of quality scores) reported significant associations between HIV and RSV-associated ALRI., Conclusions: This study presents a comprehensive report of the strength of association between various socio-demographic risk factors and RSV-associated ALRI in young children. Some of these amenable risk factors are similar to those that have been identified for (all cause) ALRI and thus, in addition to the future impact of novel RSV vaccines, national action against ALRI risk factors as part of national control programmes can be expected to reduce burden of disease from RSV. Further research which identifies, accesses and analyses additional unpublished RSV data sets could further improve the precision of these estimates.
- Published
- 2015
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36. Wasting is associated with stunting in early childhood.
- Author
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Richard SA, Black RE, Gilman RH, Guerrant RL, Kang G, Lanata CF, Mølbak K, Rasmussen ZA, Sack RB, Valentiner-Branth P, and Checkley W
- Subjects
- Anthropometry, Child, Preschool, Developing Countries, Female, Humans, Infant, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Body Height, Body Weight, Growth, Growth Disorders etiology, Wasting Syndrome complications
- Abstract
The longitudinal relationship between stunting and wasting in children is poorly characterized. Instances of wasting or poor weight gain may precede linear growth retardation. We analyzed longitudinal anthropometric data for 1599 children from 8 cohort studies to determine the effect of wasting [weight-for-length Z-score (WLZ) < -2] and variability in WLZ in the first 17 mo on length-for-age Z-score (LAZ) at 18-24 mo of age. In addition, we considered the effects of change in WLZ during the previous 6-mo period on length at 18 and 24 mo. Wasting at 6-11 or 12-17 mo was associated with decreased LAZ; however, children who experienced wasting only at 0-5 mo did not suffer any long-term growth deficits compared with children with no wasting during any period. Children with greater WLZ variability (≥0.5 SD) in the first 17 mo of life were shorter [LAZ = -0.51 SD (95% CI: -0.67, -0.36 SD)] at 18-24 mo of age than children with WLZ variability <0.5. Change in WLZ in the previous 6-mo period was directly associated with greater attained length at 18 mo [0.33 cm (95% CI: 0.11, 0.54 cm)] and 24 mo [0.72 cm (95% CI: 0.52, 0.92 cm)]. Children with wasting, highly variable WLZ, or negative changes in WLZ are at a higher risk for linear growth retardation, although instances of wasting may not be the primary cause of stunting in developing countries.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Use of a pneumonia management tool to manage children with pneumonia at the first level health care facilities.
- Author
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Noorani QA, Qazi SA, Rasmussen ZA, and Muhammad Y
- Subjects
- Adult, Case Management standards, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Health Care Surveys, Health Facilities standards, Health Facilities statistics & numerical data, Health Personnel, Humans, Male, Medication Adherence, Primary Health Care standards, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Algorithms, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Pneumonia drug therapy, Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the application and evaluation of Pneumonia Management Tool (PMT) to manage children with non-severe pneumonia (NSP) at the first level health care (FLHC) facilities according to the standard case management (SCM) guidelines for acute respiratory infections (ARI)., Method: The ARI SCM guidelines were simplified to a PMT and used by health workers at 14 FLHC facilities to assess, manage and monitor children with NSP and to educate caretakers on home care and follow-up visits. The district supervisors provided on the job support to various cadres of health workers of both public and private facilities., Results: Of 949 children with NSP, 940 (99%) were successfully treated at FLHC facilities. Caretakers found PMT useful and of 1888 follow-up visits: 1872 (99.2%) brought PMT copy; 1627 (86.2%) brought their children to the facility; 1799 (95.3%) were on time and; 1857 (98.4%) had maintained antibiotic compliance. Using PMT, health workers adherence to SCM guidelines improved from 14% at baseline to 29% after training and 65% with on the job support. The practices remained similar among various cadres of health workers., Conclusions: Health workers used PMT in managing children with NSP, counselling caretakers on home care, follow-up visits and monitoring the treatment outcome. District level supervision helped to maintain a uniform skill enhancement.
- Published
- 2011
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