9 results on '"Streatfield, Peter Kim"'
Search Results
2. Effect of Maternal Mortality on Survival of Under-Five Children.
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Razzaque, Abdur, Hossain, Md. Akhtar, DaVanzo, Julie, Hoque, Mohammad Enamul, Alam, Nurul, Bhuiya, Abbas, and Streatfield, Peter Kim
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ADOPTED children ,MATERNAL mortality ,ADOPTION ,PARENT-child relationships ,MATLAB (Bangladesh) - Abstract
With regards to children who are born shortly before their mother's death (index), the cumulative proportion of survival up to 60 months of age was significantly lower (0.39 vs. 0.81) than those born just before the last child (penultimate) of the same mother. Such a difference is mainly due to high mortality in the first six months of age. Over the period between 1974 and 2005, survival improved among the penultimate but not the index children. For index children, the cumulative proportion of survival up to 60 months of age was significantly higher (0.79 vs. 0.51) if adopted by other households by the age of 15 days compared to those who stayed in their own households. Again for index children, the cumulative proportion of survival up to 60 months of age was significantly higher (0.82 vs. 0.70) for those who stayed in their own households where a grandmother was present compared to the presence of other female household members. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
3. Spatio-temporal patterns of under-five mortality in Matlab HDSS in rural Bangladesh.
- Author
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Alam, Nurul, Haq, M. Zahirul, and Streatfield, Peter Kim
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DEATH rate ,DISEASE risk factors ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,MEDICAL geography ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,MATLAB (Bangladesh) - Abstract
Background: Knowledge of spatial and temporal distributions of mortality and morbidity is important to prioritise areas for adjusting the public health system where people need services most. A Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) plays an important role where accurate national vital events are not available in identifying areas and periods with excess mortality risks. Methods: The HDSS in Matlab, a rural area of Bangladesh, provided data on yearly number of deaths and children aged below 5 years for each of 90 villages during 1998-2007, along with village location points, longitudes and latitudes. Kulldorff 's space-time scan statistic was used to identify villages and periods that experienced high mortality risks in the HDSS area with a statistical significance of p<0.001. Logistic regression was conducted to examine if village-level education and economic status explained village-level mortality risks. Results: There were 3,434 deaths among children aged below 5 years in the HDSS area during 1998-2007 with an average yearly rate of 13 deaths per 1,000 under-five child-years. The mortality rate showed a declining trend with high concentration in 1998-2002, but not in 2003-2007. Two clusters of villages had significantly higher mortality risks in 1998-2002, but not later, and the mortality risks in the high-risk clusters reduced little, but remained significant after controlling for adult education and economic status at village level. Conclusions: Spatial clustering of childhood mortality observed during 1998-2002 had disappeared in subsequent years with a decline in mortality rates. Space-time scanning helps identify high-risk areas and periods to enhance public health actions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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4. Socio-demographic differentials of adult health indicators in Matlab, Bangladesh: self-rated health, health state, quality of life and disability level.
- Author
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Razzaque, Abdur, Nahar, Lutfun, Khanam, Masuma Akter, and Streatfield, Peter Kim
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HEALTH of older people ,QUALITY of life ,HEALTH status indicators ,OLDER people with disabilities ,MATLAB (Bangladesh) - Abstract
Background: Mortality has been declining in Bangladesh since the mid- twentieth century, while fertility has been declining since the late 1970s, and the country is now passing through the third stage of demographic transition. This type of demographic transition has produced a huge youthful population with a growing number of older people. For assessing health among older people, this study examines self-rated health, health state, quality of life and disability level in persons aged 50 and over. Data and methods: This is a collaborative study between the World Health Organization Study on global AGEing and adult health and the International Network for the Demographic Evaluation of Populations and Their Health in developing countries which collected data from eight countries. Two sources of data from the Matlab study area were used: health indicator data collected as a part of the study, together with the ongoing Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) data. For the survey, a total of 4,000 randomly selected people aged 50 and over (HDSS database) were interviewed. The four health indicators derived from these data are self-rated health (five categories), health state (eight domains), quality of life (eight items) and disability level (12 items). Self-rated health was coded as dummy while scores were calculated for the rest of the three health indicators using WHO-tested instruments. Results: After controlling for all the variables in the regression model, all four indicators of health (self-rated health, health state, quality of life and disability level) documented that health was better for males than females, and health deteriorates with increasing age. Those people who were in current partnerships had generally better health than those who were single, and better health was associated with higher levels of education and asset score. Conclusions: To improve the health of the population it is important to know health conditions in advance rather than just before death. This study finds that all four health indicators vary by socio-demographic characteristics. Hence, health intervention programmes should be targeted to those who suffer and are in the most need, the aged, female, single, uneducated and poor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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5. Arsenic Exposure and Age- and Sex-Specific Risk for Skin Lesions: A Population-Based Case--Referent Study in Bangladesh.
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Rahman, Mahfuzar, Vahter, Marie, Sohel, Nazmul, Yunus, Muhammad, Wahed, Mohammad Abdul, Streatfield, Peter Kim, Ekström, Eva-Charlotte, and Persson, Lars Åke
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ARSENIC poisoning ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of arsenic ,SKIN diseases ,MATLAB (Bangladesh) ,CONTAMINATION of drinking water ,WATER pollution ,ARSENIC content of drinking water ,POISONS - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The objective of this population-based case-referent study in Matlab, Bangladesh, was to assess the susceptibility to arsenic-induced skin lesions by age and sex, in a population drinking water from As-contaminated tube wells. METHODS: Identification of As-related skin lesions was carried out in three steps: a) screening of the entire population > 4 years of age (n = 166,934) by trained field teams; b) diagnosis of suspected As-related cases by physicians; and c) confirmation by experts based on physicians' records and photographs. A total of 504 cases with skin lesions were confirmed. We randomly selected 2,201 referents from the Matlab health and demographic surveillance system; 1,955 were eligible, and 1,830 (94%) were available for participation in the study. Individual history of As exposure was based on information obtained during interviews and included all drinking-water sources used since 1970 and concentrations of As (assessed by atomic absorption spectrophotometry) in all the tube wells used. RESULTS: Cases had been exposed to As more than referents (average exposure since 1970: male cases, 200 µg/L; female cases, 211 µg/L; male referents, 143 µg/L; female referents, 155 µg/L). We found a dose-response relationship for both sexes (p < 0.001) and increased risk with increasing socioeconomic status. Males had a higher risk of obtaining skin lesions than females (odds ratio 10.9 vs. 5.78) in the highest average exposure quintile (p = 0.005). Start of As exposure (cumulative exposure) before 1 year of age was not associated with higher risk of obtaining skin lesions compared to start of As exposure later in life. CONCLUSIONS: The results demonstrate that males are more susceptible than females to develop skin lesions when exposed to As in water from tube wells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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6. Effect of infant immunisation on childhood mortality in rural Bangladesh: analysis of health and demographic surveillance data.
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Breiman, Robert F, Streatfield, Peter Kim, Phelan, Maureen, Shifa, Naima, Rashid, Mamunur, and Yunus, Mohammed
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IMMUNIZATION of children , *PUBLIC health research , *VACCINATION of infants , *INFANT mortality ,MATLAB (Bangladesh) - Abstract
Summary Background In developing countries, immunisation programmes must compete with other strategies to improve public health and quality of life. Studies of long-term effects of immunisation programmes are rare. We assessed associations between vaccinations and mortality over 15 years after the introduction of routine infant immunisation programmes in Matlab, Bangladesh. Methods We analysed data recorded in a comprehensive health and demographic surveillance system from 1986 to 2001. We did univariate analyses and assessed vaccinations as independent factors with other variables in Cox models with time dependent covariates. Findings Diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP) and oral polio vaccination were independently associated with decreased risk of death before age 9 months, as were amount of maternal education, maternal age, childand birth order of the child. DTP vaccination was associated with increased survival (hazard ratio=0 ·76,95%CI 0 ·67 --0·88;p=0·001) in a model evaluating mortality between 6 weeks and 9 months of age. Measles vaccination was also associated with increased survival when data after late immunisation with DTP and Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) were excluded. BCG vaccination was associated with reduced survival; however, children vaccinated with BCG during the first 6 months of life had significantly lower risk of death than those vaccinated later (hazard ratio=0·59;95%CI 0·47 --0 ·73;p=0·0001). Interpretation By contrast with previous findings, we noted substantially reduced mortality among children who received DTP vaccine. This effect could be due to actual protection against pertussis disease and secondary illnesses or to a non-specific benefit, although we cannot rule out epidemiological artifact. Our findings show the value of population-based health surveillance systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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7. DO SELF-REPORTED HEALTH INDICATORS PREDICT MORTALITY? EVIDENCE FROM MATLAB, BANGLADESH.
- Author
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RAZZAQUE, ABDUR, MUSTAFA, A. H. M. G., and STREATFIELD, PETER KIM
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HEALTH status indicators , *MORTALITY , *POPULATION health , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) ,MATLAB (Bangladesh) - Abstract
In order to understand current and changing patterns of population health, there is a clear need for high-quality health indicators. The World Health Organization Study on Global AGEing and Adult Health (SAGE) survey platform and the International Network for the Demographic Evaluation of Populations and Their Health in developing countries (INDEPTH) generated data for this study. A total of 4300 people aged 50 years or older were selected randomly from the Matlab Health and Demographic Surveillance System of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh. The health indicators derived from these survey data are self-rated general health, overall health state, quality of life and disability levels. The outcome of the study is mortality over a 2-year follow-up since the survey. Among the four health indicators, only self-rated health was significantly associated with subsequent mortality irrespective of sex: those who reported bad health had higher mortality than those who reported good health, even after controlling for socio-demographic factors. For all other three health indicators, such associations exist but are significant only for males, while for females it is significant only for ‘quality of life’. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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8. Social and spatial processes associated with childhood diarrheal disease in Matlab, Bangladesh
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Perez-Heydrich, Carolina, Furgurson, Jill M., Giebultowicz, Sophia, Winston, Jennifer J., Yunus, Mohammad, Streatfield, Peter Kim, and Emch, Michael
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DIARRHEA in children , *SOCIAL processes , *SOCIAL networks , *REMOTE-sensing images , *ECONOMETRIC models , *PUBLIC health , *STATISTICAL correlation ,MATLAB (Bangladesh) - Abstract
Abstract: We develop novel methods for conceptualizing geographic space and social networks to evaluate their respective and combined contributions to childhood diarrheal incidence. After defining maternal networks according to direct familial linkages between females, and road networks using satellite imagery of the study area, we use a spatial econometrics model to evaluate the significance of correlation terms relating childhood diarrheal incidence to the incidence observed within respective networks. Disease was significantly clustered within road networks across time, but only inconsistently correlated within maternal networks. These methods could be widely applied to systems in which both social and spatial processes jointly influence health outcomes. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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9. Familial Aggregation of Vibrio cholerae-associated Infection in Matlab, Bangladesh.
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Rahman, Kazi Mizanur, Duggal, Priya, Harris, Jason B., Saha, Sajal Kumar, Streatfield, Peter Kim, Ryan, Edward T., Calderwood, Stephen B., Qadri, Firdausi, Yunus, Mohammad, and LaRocque, Regina C.
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VIBRIO cholerae , *VIBRIO infections , *VIBRIO ,MATLAB (Bangladesh) - Abstract
Vibrio cholerae is a major cause of diarrhoeal illness in endemic regions, such as Bangladesh. Understanding the factors that determine an individual's susceptibility to infection due to V. cholerae may lead to improved prevention and control strategies. Increasing evidence suggests that human genetic factors affect the severity of V. cholerae-associated infection. This study, therefore, sought to characterize the heritable component of susceptibility to infection due to V. cholerae using the Matlab Health and Demographic Surveillance System database of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh. In total, 144 pedigrees that included a cholera patient and 341 pedigrees without a cholera patient were evaluated during 1 January--31 December 1992. The odds of the sibling of a patient being admitted with cholera were 7.67 times the odds of the sibling of an unaffected individual being admitted with cholera [95% confidence interval (CI) 2.40-24.5, p<0.001], after adjustment for gender, age, socioeconomic status, and hygiene practices. Although exposure to environmental reservoirs is essential in the epidemiology of cholera, household-specific factors, such as familial relatedness to an index case, may also be important determinants of risk of cholera. Further analysis of human genetic factors that contribute to susceptibility to cholera may be productive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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