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Your search keyword '"Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena"' showing total 80 results

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80 results on '"Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena"'

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1. Impact evaluation of a community nutrition and livelihood program on child nutrition in rural Bangladesh.

2. Caregiver perceived barriers to the use of micronutrient powder for children aged 6-59 months in Bangladesh.

3. What Were the Drivers of Improving Child Nutritional Status in Bangladesh? An Analysis of National Household Data from 1992 to 2005 Guided by the UNICEF Framework.

4. Can complex programs be sustained? A mixed methods sustainability evaluation of a national infant and young child feeding program in Bangladesh and Vietnam.

5. Food transfers, electronic food vouchers and child nutritional status among Rohingya children living in Bangladesh.

6. Summarizing the Child Growth and Diarrhea Findings of the Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Benefits and Sanitation Hygiene Infant Nutrition Efficacy Trials.

7. Childhood Disability and Nutrition: Findings from a Population-Based Case Control Study in Rural Bangladesh.

8. Information Diffusion and Social Norms Are Associated with Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices in Bangladesh.

9. Maternal nutrition counselling is associated with reduced stunting prevalence and improved feeding practices in early childhood: a post-program comparison study.

10. Lower intakes of protein, carbohydrate, and energy are associated with increased global DNA methylation in 2- to 3-year-old urban slum children in Bangladesh.

11. Iron-fortified lentils to improve iron (Fe) status among adolescent girls in Bangladesh - study protocol for a double-blind community-based randomized controlled trial.

12. Impact of Small Intestine Bacterial Overgrowth on Response to a Nutritional Intervention in Bangladeshi Children from an Urban Community.

13. Zinc Absorption from Micronutrient Powders Is Low in Bangladeshi Toddlers at Risk of Environmental Enteric Dysfunction and May Increase Dietary Zinc Requirements.

14. Effects of lipid-based nutrient supplements and infant and young child feeding counseling with or without improved water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) on anemia and micronutrient status: results from 2 cluster-randomized trials in Kenya and Bangladesh.

15. Towards a Multi-Dimensional Index of Child Growth to Combat the Double Burden of Malnutrition.

16. Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh.

17. WASH Benefits Bangladesh trial: system for monitoring coverage and quality in an efficacy trial.

18. Selenium metabolism to the trimethylselenonium ion (TMSe) varies markedly because of polymorphisms in the indolethylamine N-methyltransferase gene.

19. Inclusion of Small Indigenous Fish Improves Nutritional Quality During the First 1000 Days.

20. Knowledge, attitudes and perceptions on infant and young child nutrition and feeding among adolescent girls and young mothers in rural Bangladesh.

21. Arsenic and lead in foods: a potential threat to human health in Bangladesh.

22. Nutrition transition in Bangladesh: is the country ready for this double burden.

23. Bringing rigor to evaluations of large-scale programs to improve infant and young child feeding and nutrition: the evaluation designs for the Alive & Thrive initiative.

24. Learning from the design and implementation of large-scale programs to improve infant and young child feeding.

25. Using an evidence-based approach to design large-scale programs to improve infant and young child feeding.

26. And young child feeding practices in different country settings.

27. Learning how programs achieve their impact: embedding theory-driven process evaluation and other program learning mechanisms in alive & thrive.

28. Strengthiening systems to support mothers in infant and young child feeding at scale.

30. Rural-urban disparities in child nutrition in Bangladesh and Nepal.

31. Nutrition of children and women in Bangladesh: trends and directions for the future.

32. Relationship of homestead food production with night blindness among children below 5 years of age in Bangladesh.

33. Shared environments: a multilevel analysis of community context and child nutritional status in Bangladesh.

34. Dietary intake of polyunsaturated fatty acids among breast-feeding and non-breast-feeding 24- to 48-month-old children in Bangladesh.

35. Low dietary diversity is a predictor of child stunting in rural Bangladesh.

36. Coverage of vitamin A capsule programme in Bangladesh and risk factors associated with non-receipt of vitamin A.

37. Household rice expenditure and maternal and child nutritional status in Bangladesh.

38. Child survival and IMCI: in need of sustained global support.

39. Child health and mortality.

40. Effect of consumption of the nutrient-dense, freshwater small fish Amblypharyngodon mola on biochemical indicators of vitamin A status in Bangladeshi children: a randomised, controlled study of efficacy.

41. Comparison of a qualitative and a quantitative approach to developing a household food insecurity scale for Bangladesh.

42. Economic disparity and child nutrition in Bangladesh.

43. An evaluation of the impact of a US$60 million nutrition programme in Bangladesh.

44. The multi-country evaluation of the integrated management of childhood illness strategy: lessons for the evaluation of public health interventions.

45. Epidemiologic and clinical characteristics of acute diarrhea with emphasis on Entamoeba histolytica infections in preschool children in an urban slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh.

46. Anaemia and iron deficiency among adolescent schoolgirls in peri-urban Bangladesh.

47. Relationships between vitamin A, iron status and helminthiasis in Bangladeshi school children.

48. Training activities at ICDDR,B.

49. Clinical research and service centre: an institutional profile and programmes.

50. Scientific achievements of the Centre, 1991-1995, in research on child survival.

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